“After all, most writers (and other types of creatives) struggle with making a living from the thing, they love the most.”— Tim Rettig, writingcooperative.com
“If valuing money over time is making us sad and paranoid, how do we stop?”— Charlotte Cowles, thecut.com
“Strictly book-related income — which is to say royalties and advances — are also down, almost 30 percent for full-time writers since 2009.”— Concepción de León, nytimes.com
“Making a life as a writer in New York is never as seamless as it appears on television, even when a show tries to tackle the more thorny aspects of the job.”— rachel syme, newrepublic.com
“Hi! Just a reminder that I'm a single black mom of 2 with ADD, & I was in my 30's working in marketing with no professional writing experience when I started blogging, & now I write full time & have a NYT bestselling book. You can be a writer. It's never too late. It will wait for you”— Ijeoma Oluo, twitter.com
“I am not a disability writer. I’m a writer, period. I write about disability sure, but also, pop culture and music and grief and joy and whatever I feel like.”— Keah Brown, twitter.com
“It just needs to be done, so I can say I’ve accomplished something today.”— Katie Heaney, thecut.com
“No one else’s standards of most apply. Do the things YOU imagine. Don’t try to make yourself into someone else’s version of a How To Be A Writer. Be the writer you are, & reach for the most amazing work you can do.”— Maria Dahvana Headley, twitter.com
“My goal, which isn’t always successful, is to try to take the training wheels off of essays, because I tend to have a roundabout way of getting to things.”— Sloane Crosley, hazlitt.net
“Also, 50 isn't old. 60 isn't old. THERE IS NO EXPIRATION DATE WITH WRITING. Literally, you can do this job until the day you die. So why are people fixating on getting it done before 30? Who started this myth that you have to?”— Susan Dennard, twitter.com
“When I read someone say that every writer dreams of their work being adapted for Film or TV, I roll my eyes. Writers dreams of being published, of finding readers and keeping them, of being given the space to write the books they want... everything else is just icing.”— John Boyne, twitter.com
“A good writer, like a good reader, has a mind's ear...writers need to hear as they write.”— Ursula K. Le Guin, amazon.com
“Paradoxically, vividness of description and detail here comes at the expense of realism. To put it simply, no one besides a writer—a professional noticer—notices this much, and certainly not in a near instantaneous time frame; not in a “taking in.” There is no reason to. This style of writing, which…”— Adam O'Fallon Price, blog.pshares.org
“As with writing, the silence says as much, or more, than the word.”— Adam O'Fallon Price, blog.pshares.org
“Description is, in fact, more useful for what it says about the noticer than the noticed.”— Adam O'Fallon Price, blog.pshares.org
“Writers are always looking for the secret. And sometimes someone knows someone or whatever but mostly you just need to write.”— Roxane Gay, twitter.com
“We don’t choose our stories. Our stories choose us, and if we don’t write them, if we ignore them, we are somehow diminished. But at the same time, I don’t feel that being a writer gives any of us the right to just let it rip. To disregard the feelings of the people surrounding us. So I take care. P…”— Honor Moore, danishapiro.com
“Writers are vacuum cleaners who suck up other people's lives and weave them into stories like a sparrow builds a nest from scraps.”— Garrison Keillor, amazon.com
“What happened to the writer is not what matters; what matters is the large sense that the writer is able to make of what happened.”— Beth Kephart, amazon.com