Ray Bradbury

Zen in the Art of Writing

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  • Sofia Voytovychhas quoted2 years ago
    WORK· RELAXATION· DON’T THINK, Once separated out. Now, all three together in a process. For if one works, one finally relaxes and stops thinking. True creation occurs then and only then.
  • Sofia Voytovychhas quoted2 years ago
    Nothing fails then. All goes on. Work is done. If good, you learn from it. If bad, you learn even more. Work done and behind you is a lesson to be studied. There is no failure unless one stops. Not to work is to cease, tighten up, become nervous and therefore destructive of the creative process.
  • Sofia Voytovychhas quoted2 years ago
    othing could be further from true creativity. Nothing could be more destructive than the two attitudes above.

    Why?

    Because both are a form of lying.
  • Sofia Voytovychhas quoted2 years ago
    For, please understand, if you poison me, I must be sick. It seems to me that many people writing the sick film, the sick novel, the sick play, have forgotten that poison can destroy minds even as it can destroy flesh. Most poison bottles have emetic recipes stamped on the labels.
  • Sofia Voytovychhas quoted2 years ago
    We build the strange tensions of love, where so many of the other tensions mix to be modified and transcended, and allow that fruition in the mind of the audience.

    We build tensions, especially today, toward sickness and then, if we are good enough, talented enough, observant enough, allow our audiences to be sick.

    Each tension seeks its own proper end, release, and relaxation.

    No tension, it follows, aesthetically as well as practically, must be built which remains unreleased. Without this, any art ends incomplete, halfway to its goal. And in real life, as we know, the failure to relax a particular tension can lead to madness.
  • Sofia Voytovychhas quoted2 years ago
    Here’s how my theory goes. We writers are up to the following:

    We build tensions toward laughter, then give permission, and laughter comes.

    We build tensions toward sorrow, and at last say cry, and hope to see our audience in tears.

    We build tensions toward violence, light the fuse, and run.
  • Sofia Voytovychhas quoted2 years ago
    Which brings me to my final, most important What If.
  • Sofia Voytovychhas quoted2 years ago
    To work well and constantly is to keep what you have learned and know in prime condition.
  • Sofia Voytovychhas quoted2 years ago
    When honest love speaks, when true admiration begins, when excitement rises, when hate curls like smoke, you need never doubt that creativity will stay with you for a lifetime. The core of your creativity should be the same as the core of your story and of the main character in your story.
  • Sofia Voytovychhas quoted2 years ago
    By living well, by observing as you live, by reading well and observing as you read, you have fed Your Most Original Self. By training yourself in writing, by repetitious exercise, imitation, good example, you have made a clean, well-lighted place to keep the Muse. You have given her, him, it, or whatever, room to turn around in. And through training, you have relaxed yourself enough not to stare discourteously when inspiration comes into the room.
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