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One Continuous Mistake : Four Noble Truths for Writers by Gail Sher
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One Continuous Mistake : Four Noble Truths for Writers

by Gail Sher

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124349,702 (4.19)1
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Penguin (Non-Classics) (1999), Paperback, 224 pages

Member:rooze
Collections:Read (past tense)Rating:*****
Tags:buddhism, writing, handbook, zen
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this book has stuck with me for years after I read it. I got it as gift and started it when I was in a serious rut. I would recommend it to anyone who uses writing to survive. ( )
  RavinElise | Aug 25, 2009 |
The Zen psychotherapist, writer, and teacher offers, not a treatise on writing techniques, but inspiration and notes on where be monsters. Particularly apt is "Writer's Anorexia: the Abuse of Creative Power," dealing with the internal saboteur who voices a crippling fear of inner emptiness. Worthy of many re-readings. ( )
  bordercollie | Mar 19, 2009 |
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Amazon.com (ISBN 0140195874, Paperback)

In One Continuous Mistake, Gail Sher applies the teachings of Zen Buddhism to the creative-writing process. Though there are a few writing exercises here, this is less a workbook than a series of meditations on how to be a writer. "When you read Zen literature," says Sher, "you must read each sentence with a fresh mind." And so should you write. "The real work of writing is, day after day, to discover how to maintain freshness." To do so, Sher advises (among other things) a single-minded focus, a daily writing period, sitting with a straight spine, and "letting words fall freely, without editing or censuring." By doing so, says Sher, your body "gives birth ... to what you never expected, predicted, could have thought up." Only then, adds Sher, should you revise. And when you do, revise boldly. "As Suzuki-roshi used to say about getting up when the alarm rings," she says, "'Never make the same decision twice.'" --Jane Steinberg

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:16 -0400)

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