
BY Para at Barker is a writer's writer. Though she's accumulated numerous accolades over her decades-long Fiction Prize, and was made a CBE (Commander of the British Empire) for her services to literature, she still concerns herself with things like what it means to write effective dialogue and looking past the bad first draft to see if a story has legs. "The thing about writing is it's not difficult," Barker says, now in her early 80s.
"The rules of good writing are incredibly simple. It's just that it takes you 50 years to learn." This sense of humor about her writing life filled our conversation ranging from her opinion about whether a writer's unfinished work should be published posthumously ("I do actually have a horror of leaving an orphan book where you can imagine your publisher and your executor and your agent say, 'Oh, well, it's a bit of a mess, isn't it? But on the other hand, perhaps we can just about rescue it and push it out. I don't want all that. I want any book that's published under my name to have been finished") to what she told herself about winning the Booker prize to be able to keep working ("It's such a stroke of luck.
But that's all it is.... Julian Barnes said it was 'posh bingo, and I said, when I won it, it was three lemons in a row.
Dit verhaal komt uit de January - February 2025 editie van Writer’s Digest.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Al abonnee ? Inloggen
Dit verhaal komt uit de January - February 2025 editie van Writer’s Digest.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Al abonnee? Inloggen

Avoiding the Dreaded Info Dump
Pouring too many details into a few pages is both the sign of an immature writer and an unfocused story.

FINDING LIGHT IN THE DARKNESS
How comic Gary Gulman effectively blends humor into his story of overcoming major depression.

Stephen Graham Jones
They say you should never meet your heroes. But speaking with Stephen Graham Jones is a lot like speaking with your local theater nerd about the history of Broadway, except with a lot more goosebumps and nightmares.

Failure Is the Foundation
I can recall exactly where I was when I came up with the idea for my adult fantasy series, Emily Wilde.

Fiction Is the Lie That Tells the Truth Truer
On the Legacy of Tom Spanbauer

What Is Your Story Question?
Revision and editing advice to take your first draft to the next level.

Writing for the People We Hope to Become
Elisa Stone Leahy's new middle-grade novel, Mallory in Full Color, tackles the in-between moments of adolescence, when who we are and who we want to become collide.

Creating Community
Whether hot off the presses or on the shelves for years, a good book is worth talking about.

How to Write in Different Genres
Emiko Jean and Yulin Kuang share tips and strategies for how they successfully write in different genres and mediums.