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Can I Write A Book? Discover If Writing Is For You!

by | Aug 14, 2011 | Write A Book | 6 comments

Can I Write A Book? Discover If Writing Is For You!

All aspiring writers have asked the question, can I write a book? And you’ve probably asked the question because you’ve yet to discover whether writing is really your passion. This guest blog post by Rebecca Rowan will help you answer the question, can I write a book and help you make a decision on what your book should be about.

Can I Write A Book? And What Should I Write About?

My son has always been a great story-teller, even before he could talk intelligibly. He’d stand proudly in the midst of a family circle, draw himself to his full 30 inches, and pontificate for 10 minutes in complete gibberish! We all attempted to laugh or looked dismayed in the appropriate places, but mostly we just wanted to shout, “What in the world are you trying to say?”

As he grew and developed a command of the language, his stories began to take on familiar themes, usually involving characters doing something stupid and being saved by other characters that were ultra-smart. Plenty of explosions and car chases were involved. The stories got more complex as he got older, yet the basic themes remained the same. He had found his “line.”

Once you’ve found a persistent theme for your writing, then your writing life becomes a lot simpler. You begin to focus your vision of the world through that lens, and pretty soon you start relating everything you see and everything that happens to you in terms of that focal point. And at some point you ask yourself, can I write a book?

There’s an old adage every writer is familiar with – write what you know. I’d take that a step further and say write what you care about.

I’m an only child. I’m married to an only child, the mother of an only child, and the daughter of an only child. Does it surprise you that my writing is preoccupied with family relationships? It’s not even a conscious decision – no matter what kind of idea for a story or essay I come up with, somehow family relationships are involved. I’ve completed NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month) twice, and both novels involve parent/child relationships and the emotional legacies we pass on to our children. I’m working on a short story now that involves a young man who keeps sabotaging his love life because of an unhealthy obsession with his deceased mother’s little dog (which of course is just a cover for an unhealthy obsession with his mother!)

Perhaps it sounds limiting to have a recurring theme for your work. But if you look carefully at the work of most writers and artists, you’ll notice a similar constancy of thought. Jane Austen was certainly successful in her portraits of young women discovering life and love in the 19th century. Jhumpa Lahiri has done quite well exploring the lives of second generation Indian immigrants, navigating the no man’s land between the traditional values of their parents and modern American culture.

And Monet did all right with those water lilies, didn’t he?

The real trick lies in having the skill to develop your material in new, interesting directions.

Can I write a book?

Certainly I could write fantasy novels, historical novel, or mysteries, and still retain the common thread of exploring family relationships and dynamics – the things I care about.

Sometimes writing about these preoccupations helps make sense of them in a way ordinary thinking cannot. Jhumpa Lahiri said that in writing about the two worlds she grew up in she “tried to weave them together in some combination that was orderly on the page in a way that it isn’t always in life.”

So how do you find your material? Carolyn See, author of the book Making a Literary Life, asks her students “What’s your inner voice talking about these days?” What are you thinking about when you’re in the shower, or driving your car, on the treadmill at the gym? If you’ve become accustomed to tuning out that inner voice because it’s constant muttering drives you mad, then perhaps its time to tune it back in. Turn up the volume even.

The next time you ask yourself, can I write a book also discover what you catch yourself thinking about? What experiences and relationships in your life are the most meaningful? What catches your attention when you’re out and about? These are the things you’re going to know, the things you’re going to care about, and that knowledge and caring will resonate in your writing.

This is where you’ll find your line and also answer the question can I write a book?

If you’ve asked yourself, can I write a book, did this post help you to answer that question? Please share in the comment section what your book will be about.

NEXT: 4 Ways To Come Up With Ideas To Write A Book

Can I Write A Book? Discover If Writing Is For You!

6 Comments

  1. Pj Schott

    Brilliant.

    • Stefanie

      Yes it is. Thanks for stopping by Pj.

  2. Karen Cioffi

    Interesting post. We writers most often write what we know.

  3. Carol

    You have taken my thoughts "noodling" in another direction and that will inspire me, Rebecca! Thanks for the nudge~CAROL

  4. CJP

    Loved this post. I think the essence of it is that truth, honesty and authenticty make the work resonate. So true – it is the inner voice that lets us know what to write about. I doesn't matter whether its creative non-fiction, science fiction, fan literature or whatever. If honesty is missing – the impact is lessened. Rebecca makes a great case and helps writers to exploare what is in them. Because what is in us – is what we know.

    Always great reading this blog.

    CJ

  5. CJP

    Ok! I obviously can't spell!!!!

    Stephanie – wanted to add that you are doing a great service to writers. I appreciate it.
    CJ