Rating: Summary: Essential for wannabe and already-published writers Review: After years of being told "You have to write a book," I began taking my nagging friends seriously. I bought a few books on the writing process, this being one of them. And then I started writing. Three years later, my memoir, BABY CATCHER, was published by Scribner. I'm not saying Natalie Goldberg can turn everyone into a published writer. But what I AM saying is that her book can help anyone with the most difficult part of writing: sitting down and actually applying fingers to keyboard. The book has been of concrete and serious help to bazillions of writers. But it. Then apply butt to chair seat and fingers to keyboard, and write. And write. And write.
Rating: Summary: What's up with the 4 stars reviewers gave this great book? Review: I am writing this note partly out of astonishment that some of the other reviews gave it only 4 stars. What is a 5 star book if not this one? In it, Ms. Goldberg, a writing teacher and writing workshop giver, does more than anyone else I can think of to give you an idea of how wonderful the writing process is and how accessible it is to anyone willing to write from their "bones." This is a tremendous book, even if you don't want to write--as much about living a full life as it is about writing. Best of its kind.
Rating: Summary: An old favorite... Review: This was one of my first favorite books about writing, and coming back to it years later I find that it still delivers. Natalie makes you want to put the book down frequently so that you can scribble away. Now that's a sign of some serious inspiration. I went on recently to read Long, Quiet Highway, and loved that as well. She is just one cool chick. Read this, and watch yourself write. You will, I promise.
Rating: Summary: waste of time Review: offers meaningless advise (get a fast pen?) simplistic and useless. go to the movies rather than waste time on this meaningless book.
Rating: Summary: Warm and fuzzy Review: What Natalie has acomplished here is a little pocket book of inspiration for bringing the writer within out. All kinds of good advice from her experiences and teachings. In some ways it even has a zen aproach with quotes like there should be no seperate you when you are deeply engaged.Writing does writing.I keep this book on me all times. I read it many times over during my lunch break. It leaves a good feeling within.
Rating: Summary: Worthwhile Review: I've been amused in reading the reviews of this book. So well written (excepting this one, possibly) and containing such diverse opinions. This is obviously a book you either love or hate. Left brain vs. right brain writers in the ring. I must be in the right brain camp as found it to be very worthwhile. It has provided sparks of inspiration when I needed them. It is not the only writers' guide I have read, but has been a good one to me. Get it if you prefer a nurturing voice rather than a directing one to guide you.
Rating: Summary: Touchy-Feely, strictly for the self-absorbed Review: The fatal flaw in Ms. Goldberg's book is summed in one section, "Why Do I Write?" One of the ghastly answers she offers (#5) is, "No one listens when I speak." She ignores the obvious: to be listened to--much less read--YOU MUST HAVE SOMETHING INTRIGUING TO SAY. In another telling moment, she and her friend Kate "spent the whole day talking" about how Hemingway "mistreated his wife and drank too much." They never examine why he won the Nobel Prize! If you long to--as Ms. Goldberg advises--fill up "notebooks with funny covers" featuring "Garfield, the Muppets, Mickey Mouse, Star Wars," churning out solipsistic navel-gazings that no else will ever read, then this is the book for you. Ms. Goldberg displays TOTAL lack of organization. (Some chapters are only 3 paragraphs long, with simplistic titles like "Be Specific," "Trust Yourself," and "Writing is a Communal Act.") Oh, and she has "taught writing workshops for the last eleven years"--once again, proving the old adage that those who can't, teach.
Rating: Summary: What are her assumptions? Review: Natlie Goldberg seems to make two ustated assumptions: 1) that what you are writing is very autobiographical 2) that you have a hard time writing (Oh, poor author. Let me hold your hand.) If this is true you may find her book useful. If you are writing more imaginatively or if you are interested in making your writing more intense and effective I would not choose her book. If you seek technique, rather than just encouragement, try Marge Piercy's "So You Want to Write."
Rating: Summary: My Dog Lily Review: Dear Friends, My Dog Lily taught me how to write, and here's how: 1)Pretend to throw, and then: Throw her,Lily, a juicy steak. 2)Watch her Jump up and Down in Anticipation, then catch the large thing in her mouth and paws- like she has won the Kentucky Derby and the Powerball Lottery- and a night with Mel Gibson,for example. Whatever.... Watch her attack this piece of beef like it is her last meal. She will destroy, consume, love and destroy this former cow, until this cow is naught but bone. Then, the bone is cracked open by her mighty jaw, and the marrow is new flesh to be exploited, destroyed, loved and denuded. She will worry this bone until it is a sorry relict of a cow: Broken and almost indistinguishable from any other broken object- almost. This,This,This I believe is the True Meaning of "Writing Down The Bones": Destroy Life[metaphorically speaking] like a dog does to a Bone, until you have understood Life. Then, write about this Life. In other words, Be an enzyme, a biological catalyst, so to speak. Writing is about Analyzing down to the bones, and then re-creating "Life" in your own imagination. danny.
Rating: Summary: a guide to releasing your soul Review: I bought this book on recommendations from other writers and journal keepers, but I was openly apprehensive that it would be just another "you can do it" or worse another pontification on the divine art of writing. I couldn't have been more wrong! Of all the how-to writing books I have read, all the while looking for that one filled with honest, practical advice to help shake loose my creativity free from the confines of English class rules and order, this is the best one out there. Natalie starts out telling you that it isn't an ordered process that fuels creativity. She lets you know up front that all those rules and "regulations" that you learned in every English class you ever took don't apply in real creativity. She takes you step by step, holding your hand thruout, thru a creative storm complete with exercises designed to frighten and enlighten. In the end you realize that you are, indeed, a creative person when not confined to the traditional definitions of creativity and art. I felt I could do anything, write anything, and create anything when I was done with this book. I read it straight thru in an afternoon and then went back over the period of a week and did the exercises. I still go back, months later, re-working the exercises, reading favourite chapters, and reminding myself of the wonderful wellspring of creativity in all of us. I highly recommend this book to anyone frustrated with the traditional "this is how to be creative" books that so many of us have trudged thru in desperate hopes of finding a single grain of enlightenment. Natalie gives it to you in page after page of insight, comfort, and freedom. You won't be disappointed - unless, of course, you really do like all those ridiculous rules and regulations.
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