Demons of the Blank Page
Nonfiction, Health & Well Being, Self Help, Self Improvement, Creativity, Reference & Language, Education & Teaching, Teaching, Teaching Methods, Language Arts, Writing & Publishing, Composition & Creative Writing
During the ten years author Roland Merullo (Breakfast with Buddha) taught at the university level, and during the numerous writing conferences and workshops he has been a part of since then, he has heard volumes of advice about the technical aspects of writing including plot, character, pace, description, dialogue, theme, metaphor, and symbolism. In the conferences especially, there has been a lot of practical information about finding an agent, attracting a publisher, self-publishing, e-publishing, and marketing a book once it is in print. All this is very good, helpful, and necessary. For high school and college writers, the technical material is useful; for those writing a book or hoping to make a career in the world of words, the practical material can provide a clear understanding of the publishing landscape. But again and again in those classrooms and workshops, Merullo was struck by the fact that very little was being said about what might be called the emotional or psychological aspects of the writing process. Over the course of thirty years in the profession, thirteen book publications, and several hundred articles, reviews and essays…and thanks to countless conversations with writers some famous, some widely published and admired, some struggling to finish a first book or find an agent, or just earn a good grade on a college assignment Merullo knows how critical that interior dimension of the writing life is. In this book, Merullo hopes to shed some light on that dimension of the work, not as a psychiatrist or counselor, but as an author, because he is sure that writing success however that term is defined for the individual writer always has its roots in the soil of the psychological/emotional world. From chapters entitled Writers Block to Finding A Mentor to Impatience and Rejection, Merullo covers these topics with the insight, empathy and encouragement of an author who has been there. Demons of the Blank Page is a no-nonsense handbook and guide for aspiring and established writers alike. Merullos work has been hailed happily inventive, precise and musical by The Boston Globe and emotionally complex, politically intelligent, [and] beautifully written by Kirkus Reviews.
During the ten years author Roland Merullo (Breakfast with Buddha) taught at the university level, and during the numerous writing conferences and workshops he has been a part of since then, he has heard volumes of advice about the technical aspects of writing including plot, character, pace, description, dialogue, theme, metaphor, and symbolism. In the conferences especially, there has been a lot of practical information about finding an agent, attracting a publisher, self-publishing, e-publishing, and marketing a book once it is in print. All this is very good, helpful, and necessary. For high school and college writers, the technical material is useful; for those writing a book or hoping to make a career in the world of words, the practical material can provide a clear understanding of the publishing landscape. But again and again in those classrooms and workshops, Merullo was struck by the fact that very little was being said about what might be called the emotional or psychological aspects of the writing process. Over the course of thirty years in the profession, thirteen book publications, and several hundred articles, reviews and essays…and thanks to countless conversations with writers some famous, some widely published and admired, some struggling to finish a first book or find an agent, or just earn a good grade on a college assignment Merullo knows how critical that interior dimension of the writing life is. In this book, Merullo hopes to shed some light on that dimension of the work, not as a psychiatrist or counselor, but as an author, because he is sure that writing success however that term is defined for the individual writer always has its roots in the soil of the psychological/emotional world. From chapters entitled Writers Block to Finding A Mentor to Impatience and Rejection, Merullo covers these topics with the insight, empathy and encouragement of an author who has been there. Demons of the Blank Page is a no-nonsense handbook and guide for aspiring and established writers alike. Merullos work has been hailed happily inventive, precise and musical by The Boston Globe and emotionally complex, politically intelligent, [and] beautifully written by Kirkus Reviews.