Written by February 6th, 2014

The Routines of Successful Writers

I have always been fascinated by the routines and daily schedules of other writers and artists. Writing is not a job with hours or even deadlines, unless you count the self-imposed ones. There is so much self discipline involved in being a dedicated writer. Some of my friends write best in bars, others measure their writing time by cups of tea. Everyone has different rituals or habits.  I generally get my best creative work done in the morning and then spend my afternoons editing and doing other assorted work.

I find the habits of famous writers I admire as fascinating as those of my friends. Winston Churchill wrote many large volumes of text. He did most of his wok in concentrated focused periods, often at night. However unlike most writers, he dictated the vast majority of his later work to a typist.

W.H. Auden did not believe in writing on a full stomach. He did the bulk of his writing in the morning after a breakfast of coffee, orange juice, and a cigarette. He also tended to keep his lunches light, as he often wrote in the afternoon as well.

Raymond Chandler put around four hours a day aside for writing. In those four hours he did not have to write, but he did not allow himself to do anything else.

Last year I read a fascinating article that I highly recommend called Self-Control Techniques of Famous Novelists by Irving Wallace. I have actually not read much by Irving Wallace besides the article, but I found the details of his routine fascinating. When writing his first book at 19, he kept a work chart, a tradition he has maintained since then. The charts record the date he started each chapter and the date he finished it, and the number of pages written within that period. By the time he reached his fifth book, he also recorded how many pages he wrote a day. A page from the chart is included in the article. The article also includes a great deal of other writers routines. Trollope and Hemingway also kept charts of their progress. Balzac, Flaubert, Conrad, and Hemingway, averaged at least six hours of concentrated writing a day.

Some people associate writing with inspiration, but often that comes with a great deal of hard work and self discipline.

 

 

We Send You Publishers Seeking Submissions.

Sign up for our free e-magazine and we will send you reviews of publishers seeking short stories, poetry, essays, and books.

Subscribe now and we'll send you a free copy of our book Submit, Publish, Repeat

Primera:  Seeking Manuscript Submissions

Primera: Seeking Manuscript Submissions

Primera is a digital-first imprint of Oliver Heber Books. Oliver Herber Books was founded by the author Tanya Anne Crosby, and you can learn more about the publisher as a whole here. They are based in Michigan. In 2023 they started Primera, which is open to agented and direct submissions from authors. It was hard…

Search Press

Search Press

Search Press’s tagline is “the world’s finest art and craft books”. They specialize in “practical, reference and inspirational art and craft books for beginners through to professional artists and crafters”. Everything they publish is highly illustrated, They only focus on publishing nonfiction work that fits into these categories. You can get a feel for what…

Brick Cave Media

Brick Cave Media

They are a small Science Fiction and Fantasy focused press based out of Arizona. It was founded by Bob Nelson and J.A. Giunta. You can read their origin story here, but it essentially started out as a self-publishing operation, initially not even focused on books. In 2010 they published their first book. They have published…

53 Magazines Seeking Genre Fiction

53 Magazines Seeking Genre Fiction

Most literary journals are interested in literary work, by which they mean, not genre work (although this is changing a little). The definition of genre is a category of artistic composition, as in music or literature, characterized by similarities in form, style, or subject matter. However, in the context of writing, genre can refer to…