How To Be A Writer

One of India’s most beloved writers Ruskin Bond shares a few tips for young aspiring writers

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One of India’s most beloved writers Ruskin Bond shares a few tips for young aspiring writers

Words that’s what it’s all about, really.

Using words in interesting ways—to convey a message, to tell a story, to remember the past, to bring the present to life, to express our thoughts and feelings, to capture something of the life around us. “Always use the exact word, Bond,” my English teacher, Mr. Knight, used to tell me when I was at school. “Don’t bother with difficult, complicated words. Keep it simple. Be exact. Don’t try and mystify your reader.”

Mystifying the reader and putting him off. That seems to be the cardinal vice of the writer who tries to impress you with his vocabulary and convoluted sentences.

It’s language makes the world go round.

So keep it simple. Speak and write with clarity. Don’t add to the confusion that already exists.

Are writers born or made?

This is a question that is often put to me. Certain innate qualities are present in a good writer, these are qualities that we are all born with—intelligence, sensitivity, imagination, an observant nature. And then there are qualities not everyone possesses, creativity being one of them. But to be part of a writer’s make-up, these unique qualities, have to be channelled into the use of language. And that’s where words come in.

Using words

That big fat dictionary is full of them. Open it at random and take your pick. Take any word—seize it at random—and see what you can do with it! Or what other writers have done with it.

Here’s an easy one. ‘Fat’. Well, some of us are fat people and some of us are thin and lean. There’s a memorable Fat Boy in Dickens’s Pickwick Papers, and Shakespeare’s Falstaff is a portly gentleman. Portly is a polite way of describing someone who is fat but comfortably so. You may have a fat uncle but you won&rsq...

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