A Book Review
On Writing, by Stephan King is truly one of a kind. A memoir on the life on the author born and raised in Maine which can be summed up simply as half autobiography, half writing advice. King’s approach is very straight forward. To quote him, “The shorter the book, the less the bullshit”. The first half of the book is a vivid retelling of his earlier years in life. The kids he watched horror movies with, the newspapers he wrote for, and all of the towns in between where he resided with his mother, who was quite the nomad, figuratively speaking. Not to mention his story of his struggle with drugs and alcohol. All of King’s recounts of childhood reinforce the style and form of his writing. It is detailed, yet precise and to the point.
The concluding half of the book goes on to give actual advice…on writing. King strongly urges two things; read and write a lot. According to him there is no other way to better yourself as a writer than doing those two things. He goes on to give other trivial advice, such as relaxing the use of adverbs and to write at least one thousand words a session. He even believes where you place your desk to write at plays a role. All of his suggestions are very specific.
The book is summed up by discussing his near death experience in 1999 when he was hit by a van. He recalls the entire incident with great detail, which I find rather surprising. He even remembers the price of a ring he was wearing at the time. A fairly minute detail to dredge up. This book has different values for different people. A bit colorful for those too politically correct and quite informative for those who want to be in “the know“. Again, truly one of a kind.