Creative Writing

Giant gnarled pencil for writing your own profits.

Recently I procured a writing job that has really sent my wheels spinning.  The job consists of rewriting online articles so that the article owners can reprint them without incurring any duplicate content penalties from Google and other search engines.  These “articles” are mostly very short, 250 to 600 on average, and cover a wide variety of topics such as dating tips, double chins, dehumidifiers etc.  There are quite a few article directories that publish short articles on a daily basis covering just about anything imaginable.  Below are some of these sites:

Ezinearticles.com
Goarticles.com
Articlesbase.com

This article rewriter gig has proven very laid back because I can write as little or as much as I want (solid work for insomniac writers).  However, some of the articles are so poorly written and offer such little value that I have felt I am contributing to the dumbing down of society.  However, I realize these articles are mostly serving an entirely different purpose than attempting to offer quality information.  This reason is a definite sticking point but as a writer you could contribute well-written and more informative articles that could potentially create a more appreciative audience.

While some of the articles are not in depth and very poorly written (Myself and others can only do so much in rewriting them) they serve the purpose of establishing authority and backlinks for these people’s online endeavors.  The company I write for pays me per sentence and the resulting product is a short article that over time will bring Internet traffic to the article owner’s site(s) and therefore create ongoing sales and a long-term residual income for them.  Meanwhile I receive a one-time payment for my work.  My question is, who is the smart or at least more informed one in this scenario?  I suppose it depends on who you are, what you want and how much you know.  For immediate profit the other rewriters and myself are sitting pretty but in three or six months when the article owner is making many or at least a few individual sales that greatly exceed my single one-time payment then who is making the better or more valuable long-term investment of time?  This is not to say that you can’t do rewriting and write your own articles if immediate money is a priority, which it of course is for so many including myself.  Of course if a writer knows little or absolutely nothing about Internet marketing then chances are this opportunity will never be had.  However, I wonder if writers knew they could put their writing skills to use creating articles that would point visitors towards a site that sells a quality product if they would some writers pursue this possibility?

Why don’t writers, create several websites selling some sort of commissionable product (there are literally thousands of products to offer through Clickbank.com or LinkShare.com) and then write a gaggle of these short articles and build their own side or eventual main income?  Does this mean we should not continue writing stories, novels, poems etc. or that somehow we are no longer pure writers?  If the product(s) you are selling is something you believe in and have some personal experience with why not write enlightening articles about it and make an ongoing profit off of it?

There is of course quite a bit more to being able to sell products online but being able to write well is in my opinion a huge part of the puzzle.  I constantly hear that it is so difficult to make money as a writer so why not expand our horizons? As a creative writing, MFA or potential MFA graduate does something like this appeal to you?  Let me know in the comment section, I am curious to see the responses.

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creative-writing-classroom

Would you be surprised to know that most of the critically acclaimed fiction writers over the past seventy years came through creative writing/MFA programs?  Raymond Carver, Andre Dubus, Tobias Wolff, Junot Diaz, Angela Carter, David Foster Wallace and Michael Chabon are just a few authors that fall into this inclusive category.  I recently read a fascinating article in The New Yorker by Louis Menand, a Harvard English professor, entitled Show Or Tell where Menand discusses whether or not creative writing should be taught or not.  I think the even more interesting question is whether creative writing can be taught.

Since I was able to grapple with a pencil and paper and scribble down sentences between the lines I have had an interest and some would say ability to write creatively.  I also have been an avid reader, surely due to the influences of my parents having their noses in one book or the other.  Therefore, my first attempts at short stories were often close cousins of whatever book I was reading at the time.  Stephen King pushed out quite a few imaginative tales of horror and death on my end and Nick Carter books compelled me to conjure up international shootouts and what my young mind could imagine as sexuality.  All of this is to say that since I was little creativity via writing was my one go to skill and interest that has yet to leave me.

Compare my experience with someone who has never written creatively, either because they never thought to, had an interest in it or have never taken a creative writing course.  Can that type of person learn creative writing?  I believe that they can improve upon their creative writing through practice and different exercises but will a class or classes propel them to get their writing published or make it into an MFA program?  What do you think?

The amount of published fiction writers that have gone through an MFA program has become such the norm that most would be hard pressed to find fiction writers that are outside of this streamlined funnel.  I almost feel that in current times if people can get themselves published they can quickly join the staff of an MFA or undergraduate creative writing program and start teaching new hopefuls.  One of my favorite authors Junot Diaz is a perfect example of this relatively new phenomenon. Diaz wrote much of his first published book of short stories Drown when he was in the Cornell MFA program.  One of his stories was published in The New Yorker and his book received much critical acclaim.  Soon after the books’ publication he was offered a position as a professor of creative writing at MIT.  Of course the goal of most writers is to get published and to keep improving upon their writing but it sure is nice to know that there could be a cushy professor position waiting while they work on their next book.  This new system of popping out writers from MFA programs is a nice way to not only produce great works of fiction but to also keep the books churning out and the publishers in business.

When you think of writers do you imagine them as mining their inner souls for content and struggling by themselves as they sculpt a book?  John Steinbeck did not attend an MFA program or even graduate from college but instead wrote over twenty books without the help of other published authors.  If Steinbeck were born in the past sixty years would he have been more prolific or written “better” novels?  I wonder if today’s large offering of MFA fiction programs, one hundred and fifty-three according to Menand’s article, has made life easier for creative writers to get published and whether being able to sit at the feet of published authors in a classroom helps their writing?

My experience in creative writing classes has been a huge boost for my writing in terms of the actual writing and my confidence.  Forcing myself to write even if I did not like what came out was a critical part of improving and building up that elusive writers muscle.  Facing the fear of reading my work in public, even if this particular public was ten other aspiring writers, was worth its weight in gold.  There is a definite benefit to see people’s facial reactions, a reaction that most people cannot prevent or tone down, while listening to my writing.  At first listening to others discuss my writing in my presence was an out of body experience.  There are few things more difficult than hearing critiques of my writing I spent hours working on and fussing over.  The benefits proved to be worth the torture because I was able to make important changes and was made aware of grammatical errors and inconsistencies in my stories.  Because of these classroom experiences I now have a more honed eye for things I never before thought of.  Now that is worth thousands of dollars in college loans.

In regards to the question that Menand posed about whether or not creative writing can be taught my response is a fairly strong no.  However, I do believe that creative writing classes help strengthen students writing but they will not magically change a decent or not so decent writer’s writing into writing worth publishing.  There could be a scenario whereby a person has a gift for creative writing but somehow throughout their life they never stumbled upon this ability until stepping into a creative writing class.  My guess is that scenario is not too common.

Do you think creative writing can be taught?

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