Blog Writing Tips from the World’s Most Famous Authors

You know me, I always encourage you to experiment, to learn new things, to reinvent yourself, but sometime the wheel doesn’t not need to be reinvented. Sometimes the best thing to do is to learn from the experience and wisdom of our “elders”. Such is the case of today’s blog post. Instead of sharing some of my own tips with you, I’ll leave you in the company of some of the world’s most famous authors and only interpret their teachings in the art of writing.

Easy reading is damn hard writing.
Nathaniel Hawthorne

Have something to say, and say it as clearly as you can. That is the only secret.
Matthew Arnold

It’s easy to get lost in words and ideas. It’s harder to keep your writing concise and to the point, to make it clear and easy to read. Focus on getting your ideas across, to your readers, in their most natural form. Nathaniel Hawthorne and Matthew Arnold both agree on this.

A professional writer is an amateur who didn’t quit.
Richard Bach

If you write one story, it may be bad; if you write a hundred, you have the odds in your favor.
Edgar Rice Burroughs

Writing is a continuous activity. You experiment constantly. You learn and evolve. The more you write, the better the chances to put something good out there. It’s “trial and error” until it becomes “trial and success”.

You can’t wait for inspiration. You have to go after it with a club.
Jack London

It’s something I’ve always preached. Keep your eyes and ears open to the world around you. Look for inspiration in every single thing you read, hear and see. There’s actually no such thing as a “writer’s block”, but rather failure in finding a good starting point.

Tell the readers a story! Because without a story, you are merely using words to prove you can string them together in logical sentences.
Anne McCaffrey

Stories… even simple news have a story behind. Give people a story they can relate to. Give them a story they can understand and let them draw conclusions themselves. Give them the tools and let them build their own result.

The most essential gift for a good writer is a built-in, shock-proof, shit detector. This is the writer’s radar and all great writers have had it.
Ernest Hemingway

I try to leave out the parts that people skip.
Elmore Leonard

Being a good editor is also a must for a good writer. Proof-reading and “shit detecting” as Hemingway calls it are required in order to make sure you get the best possible copy out there. What’s harder to achieve though, is being neutral, looking at your own work from an outsider’s perspective.

The two most engaging powers of an author are to make new things familiar and familiar things new.
Samuel Johnson

When 20 people are writing about the same thing, the only one to “make it” is the one putting it in a new light. There’s no point in doing the same things in the same way. Find your original angle.

What is written without effort is in generally read without pleasure.
Samuel Johnson

And your original angle comes from within your original voice. Put your heart and mind into your writings. Put passion into writing and passion with be reborn into reading.

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This article has 14 comments

  • I love these words

    You can’t wait for inspiration. You have to go after it with a club.
    Jack London

    thanks for this article..

  • Loved the inspirational and often witty comments, resonate somewhere with me, thanks for sharing.

    All the best

    Trish

  • I always love it when someone takes the time to give bloggers a few words of inspiration. Thank you for encouraging us all to keep on writing, even though we may get discourages.

    Only those who persevere will ultimately succeed!

  • I love this post! Thanks for the valuable tips to write better blogs.

  • “Have something to say, and say it as clearly as you can. That is the only secret”. I do believe in this, it’s useless to try to flatter your audience by using high-falluting words. It’s best to write with the simplest words possible to be able to effectively and efficiently get your message across.

  • The first and the last quotes are SO on-target.

    Easy reading is damn hard writing.
    Nathaniel Hawthorne

    What is written without effort is in generally read without pleasure.
    Samuel Johnson

    The drivel which some produce by talking directly into a microphone and then having that transcribed is generally, shall we say, lacklustre.

    Gary

  • Writing and speaking these two are ART which one can master by practice only. The more write, the more you speak, the more refined you get in your expressions.

    Information is another aspect of the blogs which relates to the knowledge of the subject.

    We all have to acquire sufficient knowledge and do practice a lot to make our blogging enjoyable to the readers.

  • Spit first: recently I switched from writing to recording. I just talk about what’s on my mind and get it transcribed and polished later. Works like a charm. Not only I’m able to crank out twice as many posts, recently I’m getting better feedback too.

  • this post is great :) thanks for collecting and putting all of this together.

  • Good tips to know. Thank you!

  • What you want to do is what I want.

  • Amazing and useful quotes..

  • Blogging requires passion and dedication to do so. Enjoy blogging and share your thoughts. :)

  • Great article!

    I often times get caught up with making things more “wordy” or complicated than they should be. Recently I have cut down on my descriptions and made things much more clear in what I write.

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