写作简述

Paul Graham 2005-03-01

写作简述

2005年3月

(在回答一封邮件的过程中,我意外地写了一篇关于写作的短文。我通常在一篇文章上花费数周时间。这篇花了67分钟——23分钟写作,44分钟修改。)

我认为写好文章比大多数人意识到的重要得多。写作不仅仅是交流思想;它还产生思想。如果你不擅长写作且不喜欢做,你将错过写作本会产生的大部分思想。

至于如何写好文章,这里是简短版本:尽快写出糟糕的第一版;一遍又一遍地重写;删除一切不必要的内容;用对话的语气写作;培养对糟糕写作的嗅觉,这样你就能看到并修复你自己的;模仿你喜欢的作家;如果无法开始,告诉某人你计划写什么,然后写下你所说的;期望文章中80%的思想在你开始写作后出现,而你开始时50%的思想是错误的;有足够的信心进行删减;让你信任的朋友阅读你的东西并告诉你哪些部分令人困惑或拖沓;不要(总是)制作详细的大纲;在写作前花几天时间思考想法;随身携带小笔记本或废纸;想到第一句话时就开始写作;如果截止日期迫使你在此之前开始,只说出最重要的句子;写你喜欢的东西;不要试图听起来令人印象深刻;不要犹豫地随时改变主题;使用脚注来包含离题;使用首语重复法将句子连接在一起;大声朗读你的文章,看看(a)你在哪些笨拙的短语上绊倒,(b)哪些部分令人厌烦(你害怕阅读的段落);努力告诉读者一些新的和有用的东西;在相当大的时间量内工作;重新开始时,从重读你到目前为止的内容开始;完成时,给自己留下一些容易开始的东西;在文件底部累积你计划涵盖的主题的笔记;不要觉得有义务涵盖任何主题;为不会像你一样仔细阅读文章的读者写作,就像流行歌曲被设计成在糟糕的汽车收音机上听起来不错一样;如果说错了任何话,立即修复;问朋友哪句话你会最后悔;回去缓和尖锐的评论;在线发布东西,因为观众让你写得更多,从而产生更多思想;打印出草稿而不只是在屏幕上看;使用简单的、日耳曼语的词;学会区分惊喜和离题;学会识别结尾的临近,当一个出现时,抓住它。

Writing, Briefly

March 2005

(In the process of answering an email, I accidentally wrote a tiny essay about writing. I usually spend weeks on an essay. This one took 67 minutes—23 of writing, and 44 of rewriting.)

I think it’s far more important to write well than most people realize. Writing doesn’t just communicate ideas; it generates them. If you’re bad at writing and don’t like to do it, you’ll miss out on most of the ideas writing would have generated.

As for how to write well, here’s the short version: Write a bad version 1 as fast as you can; rewrite it over and over; cut out everything unnecessary; write in a conversational tone; develop a nose for bad writing, so you can see and fix it in yours; imitate writers you like; if you can’t get started, tell someone what you plan to write about, then write down what you said; expect 80% of the ideas in an essay to happen after you start writing it, and 50% of those you start with to be wrong; be confident enough to cut; have friends you trust read your stuff and tell you which bits are confusing or drag; don’t (always) make detailed outlines; mull ideas over for a few days before writing; carry a small notebook or scrap paper with you; start writing when you think of the first sentence; if a deadline forces you to start before that, just say the most important sentence first; write about stuff you like; don’t try to sound impressive; don’t hesitate to change the topic on the fly; use footnotes to contain digressions; use anaphora to knit sentences together; read your essays out loud to see (a) where you stumble over awkward phrases and (b) which bits are boring (the paragraphs you dread reading); try to tell the reader something new and useful; work in fairly big quanta of time; when you restart, begin by rereading what you have so far; when you finish, leave yourself something easy to start with; accumulate notes for topics you plan to cover at the bottom of the file; don’t feel obliged to cover any of them; write for a reader who won’t read the essay as carefully as you do, just as pop songs are designed to sound ok on crappy car radios; if you say anything mistaken, fix it immediately; ask friends which sentence you’ll regret most; go back and tone down harsh remarks; publish stuff online, because an audience makes you write more, and thus generate more ideas; print out drafts instead of just looking at them on the screen; use simple, germanic words; learn to distinguish surprises from digressions; learn to recognize the approach of an ending, and when one appears, grab it.Russian TranslationJapanese TranslationRomanian TranslationSpanish TranslationGerman TranslationChinese TranslationHungarian TranslationCatalan TranslationDanish TranslationArabic Translation