Selected Product: | The Writing Life Paperback Author: Annie Dillard Publisher: Harper Perennial Release Date: 1990-09-26 ISBN-10: 0060919884 ISBN-13: 9780060919887 List Price: $11.95 Average Customer Rating: | | Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life ISBN-10: 0385480016 ISBN-13: 9780385480017 List Price:$14.95 On Writing ISBN-10: 0743455967 ISBN-13: 9780743455961 List Price:$7.99 Pilgrim at Tinker Creek (Harper Perrennial Modern Classics) ISBN-10: 0061233323 ISBN-13: 9780061233326 List Price:$14.95 Teaching a Stone to Talk: Expeditions and Encounters ISBN-10: 0060915412 ISBN-13: 9780060915414 List Price:$13.95 An American Childhood ISBN-10: 0060915188 ISBN-13: 9780060915186 List Price:$13.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for The Writing Life by Annie Dillard (ISBN-10: 0060919884, ISBN-13: 9780060919887). At this time we have not yet written a review for The Writing Life by Annie Dillard (ISBN-10: 0060919884, ISBN-13: 9780060919887). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com With color, irony and sensitivity, Pulitzer prize-winner Annie Dillard illuminates the dedication absurdity, and daring that is the writer's life. As it probes and exposes, examines and analyzes, The Writing Life offers deeper insight into one of the most mysterious of professions. Excellent Book for Any Creative | Customer Rating: | | The Writing Life is an excellent read not only for writers, but for anyone who creates in any medium. Fine artists, photographers, and craftspeople would all benefit from this insightful book. It is for anyone who wished to get to the marrow of their creative endeavor. | A Gem of a Book | Customer Rating: | This book is a gem - the best book I have yet had the privilege of reading about the craft of writing. When finished, you are left with a sense of many aspects of being a writer - the mystery, the satisfaction, the needed humility, the sublimity... and most of all, the work and the waiting.
Though it may seem at times that Dillard makes the craft of writing too ethereal, too abstract, this is counterbalanced by austere sensibility. Her voice, though exceptionally beautiful and intelligent, is surprisingly conversational. One feels as though she is not writing artificially.
My favorite quote from The Writing Life has to be, "Write as if you were dying. At the same time, assume you write for an audience consisting solely of terminal patients. That is, after all, the case" (68). Though Dillard does not write from a noticeably Christian perspective, this rings true for me in so many ways, including spiritually. She says, "Why are we reading, if not in hope of beauty laid bare, life heightened and its deepest mystery probed?" (72).
And just when you think she is becoming too sublime, she says something like, "It is no less difficult to write sentences in a recipe than sentences in Moby-Dick. So you might as well write Moby-Dick" (71). She has an enviable power to say things in simple, precise, but imaginative terms. Her analogies are strong and brilliant - biting at one moment, dazzling at the next. She is a master at showing instead of telling.
Full of personal anecdotes, colorful imagery, and striking insights, The Writing Life is the perfect companion for anyone who cares about giving voice to his or her way of looking at the world. | Dangerously Engaging | Customer Rating: | I recently received this book in the mail.
I opened the package and sat at my desk in my college dorm room; I had no idea what was about to happen.
The clock read 11:46 pm as I started into this short read, and I seemingly did not take a breath until I was finished with the last page over an hour later. Annie Dillard once again captured every exciting aspect of writing in one of her works, and she managed to contain it all in little over a hundred pages.
Dillard is one of the best American writers of our time, and this book proves it. It is worth ten times what you will pay for it.
If you have any passion for writing, you will love this book. If you would like to get inside the head of the great Annie Dillard, you will love this book.
Buy it, check it out, borrow it; read it somehow. | One writer's practice and wisdom | Customer Rating: | The 'Paris Review Interviews' which were started by George Plimpton interviewed over at least two decades scores of writers on questions of their writing habits and practices. Hemingway sharpened dozens of pencils before beginning the day's work, and Faulkner told us about how he read no contemporary authors but only returned again and again to the eternal favorites to Shakespeare and Cervantes. In her essay here Annie Dillard discusses her own unique habits as a writer, and tells how she thinks about it, and practices her craft. She discusses the difficulties for her of the writing life, and the intense and painful practice of bringing work to the level she finds right. A longtime reader and interpreter of Thoreau she has something of his devotion to nature, and his solitary reflectiveness. She hears her own drummer and has beaten a path to the heart of many readers. But every writer has of course to find their own way. So not the whole of the story but some hint or suggestion along the way might well prove useful to the many aspiring writers who might read this work. | Good to have a cup of tea with once in a while | Customer Rating: | This is a charming little book--honest, somewhat lucid, and, at times, helpful. "The Writing Life" is Dillard's reflections on her writing life, written in a way that is quite conversational. For those of you who are finding your way through your own writing life, and, as I do, often need a little encouragement, then this is a neat little book to have on your nightstand. Relax, pour yourself a cup of tea, and read a chapter or two; perhaps then take a little nap--you'll feel better in no time.
My only caution is that this 'genre' of writing is growing in strength, summoning forth both astute and sophomoric writers to join its ranks. You'll find yourself spending more and more precious time reading about the 'theory' of writing, rather than working through the pain of your own creative process. Hence, I'd suggest only engaging in this type of writing once in a while; and perhaps have only two or so of these books in your library. I recommend both this one, and a little gem by the great Canadian writer, Margaret Atwood, entitled, "Negotiating with the Dead: A Writer on Writing". |
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