书籍 On Writing的封面

On Writing

Stephen King

出版时间

2002-03-31

ISBN

9780743421041

评分

★★★★★
书籍介绍

Book Description

"If you don't have the time to read, you don't have the time or the tools to write."

In 1999, Stephen King began to write about his craft -- and his life. By midyear, a widely reported accident jeopardized the survival of both. And in his months of recovery, the link between writing and living became more crucial than ever.

Rarely has a book on writing been so clear, so useful, and so revealing. On Writing begins with a mesmerizing account of King's childhood and his uncannily early focus on writing to tell a story. A series of vivid memories from adolescence, college, and the struggling years that led up to his first novel, Carrie, will afford readers a fresh and often very funny perspective on the formation of a writer. King next turns to the basic tools of his trade -- how to sharpen and multiply them through use, and how the writer must always have them close at hand. He takes the reader through crucial aspects of the writer's art and life, offering practical and inspiring advice on everything from plot and character development to work habits and rejection.

Serialized in the New Yorker to vivid acclaim, On Writing culminates with a profoundly moving account of how King's overwhelming need to write spurred him toward recovery, and brought him back to his life.

Brilliantly structured, friendly and inspiring, On Writing will empower -- and entertain -- everyone who reads it.

Amazon.com

Short and snappy as it is, Stephen King's On Writing really contains two books: a fondly sardonic autobiography and a tough-love lesson for aspiring novelists. The memoir is terrific stuff, a vivid description of how a writer grew out of a misbehaving kid. You're right there with the young author as he's tormented by poison ivy, gas-passing babysitters, uptight schoolmarms, and a laundry job nastier than Jack London's. It's a ripping yarn that casts a sharp light on his fiction. This was a child who dug Yvette Vickers from Attack of the Giant Leeches, not Sandra Dee. "I wanted monsters that ate whole cities, radioactive corpses that came out of the ocean and ate surfers, and girls in black bras who looked like trailer trash." But massive reading on all literary levels was a craving just as crucial, and soon King was the published author of "I Was a Teen-Age Graverobber." As a young adult raising a family in a trailer, King started a story inspired by his stint as a janitor cleaning a high-school girls locker room. He crumpled it up, but his writer wife retrieved it from the trash, and using her advice about the girl milieu and his own memories of two reviled teenage classmates who died young, he came up with Carrie. King gives us lots of revelations about his life and work. The kidnapper character in Misery, the mind-possessing monsters in The Tommyknockers, and the haunting of the blocked writer in The Shining symbolized his cocaine and booze addiction (overcome thanks to his wife's intervention, which he describes). "There's one novel, Cujo, that I barely remember writing."

King also evokes his college days and his recovery from the van crash that nearly killed him, but the focus is always on what it all means to the craft. He gives you a whole writer's "tool kit": a reading list, writing assignments, a corrected story, and nuts-and-bolts advice on dollars and cents, plot and character, the basic building block of the paragraph, and literary models. He shows what you can learn from H.P. Lovecraft's arcane vocabulary, Hemingway's leanness, Grisham's authenticity, Richard Dooling's artful obscenity, Jonathan Kellerman's sentence fragments. He explains why Hart's War is a great story marred by a tin ear for dialogue, and how Elmore Leonard's Be Cool could be the antidote.

King isn't just a writer, he's a true teacher.

                            --Tim Appelo

Stephen Edwin King was born the second son of Donald and Nellie Ruth Pillsbury King. After his father left them when Stephen was two, he and his older brother, David, were raised by his mother. Parts of his childhood were spent in Fort Wayne, Indiana, where his father's family was at the time, and in Stratford, Connecticut. When Stephen was eleven, his mother brought her childr...

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用户评论
有声书,zuoz
Writers are formed,not made.
干货
十一休假,在家里沙发上,床头前,阳光下,飞行中完成的第二本英文原著,Kindle 5号字,#3422页,用时记不清,反正不干活,不吃饭,不看新相亲时代,没睡觉的时间都在看它。Stephen的文字在我脑海中的成像是一幅幅生动画面,一幕接一幕吸引我无法释卷。收获了满满的工具箱,写作细节和他的故事。这本书让我爱上了传记!接着来!
读完以后,能有效提高中英文写作水平。
自传部分5分,写作部分无聊得要命。这个人简直太有趣了,他上学的时候一定是那种经常去Deans office 罚站的男生,还有那个poison ivy,真的是蛋疼。What a character 🤣 后面写作部分,有可能因为我是靠另一种方式的写作为生,所以感觉他讲的要不用不到要不nothing new。其实他说了那么多,天份还是最重要的,很多小的灵光一闪对人家就是一本书的灵感,而我们就根本无法发现这些idea啊。
听完的这本书,总有种感觉是作者自己朗读的。不是很习惯听书,主要是做标注不方便,也不方便回溯。总之大师说的多读多写,没有捷径。
A useful, candid and entertaining book for whoever wants to be a writer, or storyteller.
粗读,届到了金的风趣。他从小写作、在洗衣房写作、从鬼门关回来后仍旧写作的人生经历更加吸引我,也是写作精神最好的体现;写作技巧部分于我,可以反矫,可以反自我陶醉。
I believe the road to hell is paved with adverbs, and I will shout it from the rooftops.