The Creative Writer's Survival Guide: Advice from an Unrepentant Novelist

The Creative Writer's Survival Guide: Advice from an Unrepentant Novelist

by JohnMcNally (Author)

Synopsis

Beginning with The Writer's Wonderland Or: A Warning and ending with You've Published a Book Now What? The Creative Writer's Survival Guide is a must-read for creative-writing students and teachers, conference participants, and aspiring writers of every stamp. Directed primarily at fiction writers but suitable for writers of all genres, John McNally's guide is a comprehensive, take-no-prisoners blunt, highly idiosyncratic, and delightfully subjective take on the writing life.
McNally has earned the right to dispense advice on this subject. He has published three novels, two collections of short fiction, and hundreds of individual stories and essays. He has edited six anthologies and worked with editors at university presses, commercial houses, and small presses. He has earned three degrees, including an MFA from the Iowa Writers' Workshop, and taught writing to thousands of students at nine different universities. But he has also received far more rejections than acceptances, has endured years of underpaid adjunct work, and is presently hard at work on a novel for which he has no guarantee of publication. In other words, he's been at the writing game long enough to rack up plenty of the highs and lows that translate into an invaluable guide.
McNally wrestles with writing degrees and graduate programs, the nuts and bolts of agents and query letters and critics, book signings and other ways to promote your book, alcohol and other home remedies, and jobs for writers from adjunct to tenure-track.
Chapters such as What Have You Ever Done That's Worth Writing About? Can Writing Be Taught? Rejection: Putting It in Perspective, Writing as a Competitive Sport, Seven Types of MLA Interview Committees, Money and the Writer, and the all-important Talking about Writing vs. Writing cover a vast range of writerly topics from learning your craft to making a living at it. McNally acts as the writer's friendly drill sergeant, relentlessly honest but bracingly cheerful as he issues his curmudgeonly marching orders. Alternately cranky and philosophical, full of to-the-point anecdotes and honest advice instead of wonkish facts and figures, The Creative Writer's Survival Guide is a snarky, truthful, and immensely helpful map to being a writer in today's complex world.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 272
Publisher: University of Iowa Press
Published: 15 Aug 2010

ISBN 10: 1587299208
ISBN 13: 9781587299209

Media Reviews

I write this blurb in distress because for years I've been stealing John McNally's sharp insights into writing and publishing and passing them off as my own. Now this generous so-and-so is sharing his vast experience as a writer and editor with everyone. Worse yet, this book, despite its instructional value, is irresistibly, un-put-downably readable. --Timothy Schaffert, author, Devils in the Sugar Shop


This has got to be the most comprehensive nuts-and-bolts how-to that has ever been written about writing. McNally has answered every one--every one!--of the questions that always come up in a Q&A session when the writer's impulse is to talk about Art and the audience wants to know: how do I get to be you? I look forward to having this book in hand. It's a fine addition to the ever-growing literature of creative writing, and it covers everything . --Janet Burroway, author, Imaginative Writing: The Elements of Craft and Bridge of Sand


I write this blurb in distress because for years I've been stealing John McNally's sharp insights into writing and publishing and passing them off as my own. Now this generous so-and-so is sharing his vast experience as a writer and editor with everyone. Worse yet, this book, despite its instructional value, is irresistibly, un-put-downably readable. --Timothy Schaffert, author, Devils in the Sugar Shop


This has got to be the most comprehensive nuts-and-bolts how-to that has ever been written about writing. McNally has answered every one--every one!--of the questions that always come up in a Q&A session when the writer's impulse is to talk about Art and the audience wants to know: how do I get to be you? I look forward to having this book in hand. It's a fine addition to the ever-growing literature of creative writing, and it covers everything . --Janet Burroway, author, Imaginative Writing: The Elements of Craft and Bridge of Sand


I write this blurb in distress because for years I ve been stealing John McNally s sharp insights into writing and publishing and passing them off as my own. Now this generous so-and-so is sharing his vast experience as a writer and editor with everyone. Worse yet, this book, despite its instructional value, is irresistibly, un-put-downably readable. Timothy Schaffert, author, Devils in the Sugar Shop


This has got to be the most comprehensive nuts-and-bolts how-to that has ever been written about writing. McNally has answered every one every one! of the questions that always come up in a Q&A session when the writer s impulse is to talk about Art and the audience wants to know: how do I get to be you? I look forward to having this book in hand. It s a fine addition to the ever-growing literature of creative writing, and it covers everything. Janet Burroway, author, Imaginative Writing: The Elements of Craft and Bridge of Sand

Author Bio

John McNally is the author of three novels, After the Workshop, The Book of Ralph, and America s Report Card, and two story collections, Troublemakers (Iowa, 2000) and Ghosts of Chicago. He has edited six anthologies, including When I Was a Loser: True Stories of (Barely) Surviving High School and Humor Me: An Anthology of Humor by Writers of Color (Iowa, 2002). His fiction, book reviews, and essays have appeared in more than a hundred publications, including the Washington Post, the Sun, and Open City, and he is a contributing editor to the Virginia Quarterly Review. A native of Chicago s southwest side, he is an associate professor of English at Wake Forest University.