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Bird by Bird : Some Instructions on Writing and Life

Bird by Bird : Some Instructions on Writing and Life

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Better than "Writing Down the Bones"
Review: Straightforward and humorous inspiration. Lamott is honest and isn't afraid to be a little ugly. If you read it once you'll likely read it again. However, this isn't a "How to Write" book. If you're looking for writing instruction, there are better choices. If you want to know that you aren't alone in your quirky writing life, pick this book up.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Thank you, Anne Lamott
Review: Over the years, I've tried to read nearly a dozen "how-to" books on writing. Bird by Bird was the first one which really spoke to me. I've read it three times. Whenever I get stuck, I can pick it up and find something valuable in it.

She reminds us that we are all human; that all of our stories matter; that being published isn't the Holy Grail; that every writer starts with crummy first drafts.

if you love to write, love to read, love to laugh, buy this book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This book is a gift.
Review: I completely loved this book and I don't think I can say enough about it. For me, as an aspiring writer, she seemed to say so many things that I think I've been needing to hear for a really long time - this book resonated with me. I have pages of quotes from her book written down in my journal, and I consider them a treasure. It's amazing how she manages to intertwine her thoughts on writing with her thoughts on life - it's amazing how she reveals their intrinsic connection. I think the one thing that I appreciate most about this book is her honesty and her dedication to truth - I feel like she has written a very 'complete' book in the purest sense of the word - she has genuinely told us everything about writing she knows. I have complete faith in her optimism, her brightness, her joy. The life inside of her reverberates through her words.

A great thing about this book is that it reads easily, but at the same time, you can't finish it in one sitting just because she offers so much to absorb and reflect upon - you can't take it all in one breath.

In short, this book has given me sustenance, and I will remember it, especially in times of writing draughts. If you can discover the worth of this book, I know you will be grateful. I have not met Ms. Lamott, but I think she must be a very beautiful person, because her words and thoughts have truly touched me.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Got me started on my novel
Review: The best plug I can give this book is that it gave me the inspiration (courage?) to plunge ahead and start on my first novel. Before reading it, I never thought I could write anything as long as a novel, but I'm now on page 127. It may have taken me 18 months, but I'm still going...bird by bird. Thanks, Anne.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Funny and Inspiring
Review: In her devastatingly honest, self-depricating, hilarious style, Anne Lamott delivers exactly what she has promised--advice on writing and life.

Lamott tells us that getting published doesn't really change things the way many aspiring writers seem to believe it will--you may become a published author, but you're still you. Some of her most valuable advice is about dealing with perfectionism, which she wisely calls "The Enemy of the People."

This inspiring, funny book is a must for writers struggling with discouragement or self-doubt.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the funniest books I've ever read--
Review: --right up there with Lamott's "Operating Instructions." This book may not help you much if you're looking to improve your writing, but it may be the best book you'll ever find to help you get over your blocks and WRITE.

Lamott has a gift for looking at the world and especially herself with meticulous and embarrassing honesty and finally loving and accepting what she sees. Readers who are into Zen or a similar spiritual practice will find inspiration here for their practice as well as their writing.

(Also recommended for encouraging you in creative expression and befriending yourself: Julia Cameron's "The Artist's Way" and Natalie Goldberg's "Writing Down the Bones" and "Wild Mind.")

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Self-indlugent trash for the self-preocupied.
Review: If you are a writer haunted by self-doubt and keep battling the daemons that haunt your ego, this book might give you a couple of insights on how to start writing. There are some useful tidbits for the rest of us, but these are difficult to find, and force you to read the rest. You will find no guidance as to creating a better plot, or characters, as the chapter names would lead you to believe.

I expected a book like "Structuring Your Novel: From Basic Idea to Finished Manuscript" from Meredith and Fitzgerald, but with a personal spin. But instead I got some new-age drivel. Its nice to see that the author found solace and escape in her writing (and if you believe the description of the accompanying video, other things), but I wished she would have given us more of a book on writing then one on her personal pains.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Funny, inspiring, & wise--but get your craft elsewhere
Review: If there's a better book to read when you're doubting yourselfand your writing ability, I don't know what it is. IF YOU WANT TOWRITE by Brenda Ueland may be more profound, but it's not as funny... I don't think Lamott copied Ueland at all. Both books are wonders, Ueland's more spiritual or mystical--i.e. how to express your own unique self and write your truth--and Lamott's more worldy--how to get your rear in gear and start producing copy. Lamott's chapter on crumby first drafts lets you know you must start somewhere and can't do that if you're constantly criticizng and editing yourself. And she is so right--once you have a beginning, you can make it better..and better...and better. She doesn't really tell you how to do that in very specific terms, but for that there's great sourcebooks like SELF EDITING FOR FICTON WRITERS and ON WRITING WELL, which more than cover the job. Bird by Bird may be short on craft, but it's long on motivation, humor, and practical ways to get yourself writing.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Listen to your broccoli
Review: I've read a number of other books on this subject, and none of them comes close to this one in wit and enlightenment. Not that I profess to be a writer, but I do believe that it is one of the hardest, lonliest, and most punishing of professions. Ms. Lamott's honest yet encouraging depiction of the travails of anyone crazy enough to try his/her hand at this, ALMOST makes ME feel crazy enough ... A bonus is her eloquent musings on the-meaning-of-it-all, equal to the efforts of famous philosophers.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: funny, useful, recommended
Review: A charming and often funny book on just what it says, writing and life. "Bird by bird" could be used as a philosophy for managing a lot of things....Anne for President!


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