4th July 2016 | for Creatives | biography, writing, storytelling, Reginald Dwayne Betts |
"I read somewhere that all biography is a lie, or at least that all biography is a single telling of a life when there can easily be a thousand different tellings."
"If your story fails to have even the tiniest glimmer of fun in it, I must politely eject. Even the darkest and most nihilistic tales need that little starburst of fun or humor—not only to break up the darkness but also to serve as contrast to the darkness. The darkness is meaningless if we don't have any light for comparison."
"I think the better use of research is talking to people where they develop a trust and tell you their greatest story. If you go in there and you know what you want to write and you just want to write it, then why bother them? But you're there and taking their time because they have something amazing to share, and as a writer, all you're doing is trying to look through someone else's eyes."
"Don't write because you think the genre is cool, write because you have a story to tell (and the genre will find you)."
"Sometimes it's as simple as that. Tell a story. Tell it simply and directly. Tell us what happened."
"I think a story, when properly told, finds its own natural length. If you try to extend it too much, it just stretches and begins to bore, and if you try to compress it too much, it just fractures. So you just hope that you can find the right rhythm. It's a musical thing. You feel it out, you cut back, you switch things around—until it feels entirely natural. A story should feel easy when of course it's far from easy." (artist)
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