With chapters broken down into lessons, we start with the real nitty gritty stuff: ‘Why Do You Want To Be a Writer?’ Sounds like an easy question, but it’s not. He’s serious, and you should be serious as well. Writing is tough, lonely, and takes a lot of discipline. But if you’ve always wanted to write, and you’re serious, then you’ll get there if you put in the work. The next lesson, ‘Getting Focused’, is the lesson that resonated with me the most. I’m definitely not a ‘pantser’; I need some kind of roadmap to navigate me through my story. Outlining is boring and frankly I’d rather watch paint dry, but it’s necessary for me to write. Morrell understands this, and offers a nice alternative to outlining that’s easy and fundamentally sound to achieving the focus you need to get started.
Finishing off with Dealing with Writer’s Block and the Business of Writing, Morrell takes us on a behind-the-scenes tour of his experience with getting First Blood adapted for film, and the continuing saga of John Rambo. Even though Morrell is not known as a horror genre writer, it’s important to know he is one of the masters of suspense, which is really what makes any story scary anyway. There are just as many ways to write your story as there are books about the craft of writing, and everyone likes to do it a little differently. If you’re serious about learning the craft and improving your writing, David Morrell’s The Successful Novelist comes highly recommended.
BOB PASTORELLA
If you enjoyed this Searchlight column and want to read The Successful Novelist by David Morrell, please consider clicking through to our Amazon Affiliate links. If you do you’ll help keep the This Is Horror ship afloat with some very welcome remuneration.
Buy The Successful Novelist: A Lifetime of Lessons about Writing and Publishing by David Morrell