Two questions that
every author asks -- When is it finished and is it good enough?
There are two, cult
classic, movies that I have watched at least a dozen times, Eddie
and the Cruisers and Eddie
and the Cruisers II. The movies center on a 60s rock band that is ready
to break through to the big time, but Eddie, the band leader, is not sure they
are ready. In one scene the bass player says, “We’re not great, we’re just a bunch
of guys from Jersey, and Eddie says, “If we can’t be great then there is no
reason to make the music.” I am paraphrasing from memory here, but those words
are close enough to get the meaning of the scene.
Who is right and how
does this apply to writers? Do writers write to be great, or do they write with
just a hope of being good enough to sell something? I have two complete novels,
one complete non-fiction historical, two collections of short stories and
various other finished and unfinished works. All are unpublished. Why? Not good
enough, not by my standards anyway. One novel I have edited at least a dozen
times, I like it, like it a lot, but the beginning is weak, too weak for me.
I have paragraphs
that I rewrite every time I edit, never satisfied with what I have on paper. In
my mind there seems to be no definitive end to when it is finished. I want
perfect, not sure that’s going to happen. And in case you are new to my posts,
I have published a dozen short stories, travel pieces and news articles in the
past few years. Somehow I have hit publishing
block with the longer stuff.
So what do I do?
Write a new story for my grandkids, they love them all, and for them I don’t care
if it’s perfect, just want to make it fun.
My Idea of Perfection - Wyoming Sunset Aug 10, 2014 |
Write on!
1 comment:
Amen! Write on! But you have to submit it a publisher to find out if it's good enough if it's not ever going to be good enough for you.
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