Aspiring writers read books and go to workshops, searching for that magic formula to guide them along their writing journey. Writers who have been working for years suddenly find themselves staring at a blank sheet of paper, wondering why the magic has gone out of their work Enter Roberta Jean Bryant with her self-guided, personalized workshop of words, Anybody Can Write. Through this new edition of her innovative book, you can learn to experience the fun or writing, not the frustration. Escape those feelings of self-doubt and distress by launching into the lighthearted Wordplay exercises. Discover how to tap into the richness of your life experience and put it to use in your writing. Determine methods to activate your "creative mode," and develop the principles of the "write brain" experience. Anybody Can Write can help both the experienced writer who is trying to overcome writer's block and the novice writer who is unconfident and unsure of how to begin. With this special guide, all writers can find the magic of the written word, either once again or for the very first time.
This cheerful little book is full of sensible reminders concerning what its author, Roberta Jean Bryant, calls the "trial-and-error-and-error-and-error process of writing." Bryant does not make light of the difficulties of writing; rather, she believes that if you actually manage to have fun at it, "you'll be more likely to have a deeper experience." Bryant's approach may be playful, but she has her own quiet way of whipping her readers into shape. Toward the beginning of
Anybody Can Write, she provides a method for assessing how much of one's writing energy actually goes into writing. "Dreaming of being a writer," she warns, "...is not writing. Thinking about writing is not writing. Getting excited by ideas for stories, plotting out a book in your head, reading about writing--none of these is writing.... Writing is putting words on paper."
Bryant guides her readers from first draft ("a time ... to fingerpaint with words") through rewrites and feedback--"you know you've received good advice," she says, "when, after hearing it, you wish you'd thought of it yourself, or you have a spontaneous and genuine desire to try it out." And she discusses how--if you so desire--to get published (the secret, she says, "is to have the right manuscript on the right desk at the right time"). "Anybody Can Write" leans toward the inspirational, but it is not cloying. Bryant may be trying to embrace and encourage all would-be writers, but she does not invite mediocrity. "Aim to go beyond ordinary limits with your writing," she intones. "Remember that a laborer is someone who works with his hands, a craftsperson is someone who works with his hands and head, but an artist is someone who works with his hands, head, and heart." Oh, yes--and "begin now." --Jane Steinberg