Submitted by franhawthorne t3_yv7yrg in books
A lot of people write “books” in childhood, but for me it was always my career plan. (In fact, one novel I wrote in middle school wasn’t too bad; I wish I could find it now.) However, in my sophomore year at UC Berkeley, a roommate suggested that I try writing for the student newspaper, The Daily Californian – and after just one news article, fiction disappeared from my view for three decades. I became an editor at the Daily Cal, got hired by a prize-winning newspaper chain in Silicon Valley, then moved to New York City, then on to BusinessWeek and other business publications, then my first nonfiction book contract, followed by four more books and some nice awards … Well, somehow I never had time for writing fiction. Until that old novelistic cliché -- two life-changing events -- really woke me up, nine years ago. Now, finally, I know why I had to write novels back when I was four years old.
My first published novel, The Heirs (Stephen F. Austin State University Press, 2018), was about second-generation Holocaust guilt among two families in New Jersey. My newest, I Meant to Tell You (SFASU Press again, November 2022), is about a kidnapping, the limits of friendship, secrets, and political activism. I’m now working on two more books -- after all, I have a lot of lost years to catch up on!
Please check out my Website and/or follow me on Twitter and Instagram:
- Website. https://www.hawthornewriter.com/
- Twitter. https://twitter.com/hawthornewriter
- Instagram. https://www.instagram.com/hawthornewriter/
hungrytiredandbored t1_iwcuz0w wrote
If someone is good at writing but has no motivation, what advice would you give them?