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Jul 14, 2004

The Difference Between Writing and Blogging

I've been blogging in this format for almost a year now, sticking to punditry and rants and backing off the personal stuff, for one main reason: I've always wanted to be a writer.

Not a writer just in the sense that I write this blog, but a writer in the sense that I weave stories, fictional or not, that people are interested in. In the world of nonfiction, this means finding the angle - finding the people behind the story or the undercurrent that led to the events you're reporting on. In the nonfictional world, it means telling a tale in a way that keeps the reader wanting more while painting your imaginary world for them in vivid imagery..

The problem with blogging is that I'm not doing this full time, and even saying that is an understatement. I'm doing it in stolen moments in the doctors office, on trains.

If I were a full time writer, I would have taken that Merck/Singular thread and followed it out, called people involved, gotten interviews and found out what it was really like to work on that project, what challenges they've faced.

Instead, it's hurriedly typed into the perfect little portable palm/keyboard pair I've gotten for myself, and slapped on the blog with barely enough time to run aspell -c on it.

At times, I've considered slowing down the pace of my blogs and really working on them like stories, releasing one or two well written pieces a month. The prospect of writing articles that are more fleshed out and interesting to read is appealing, but I'd have to give up the story-nugget/link format and the nice readership growth curve I've been nurturing with timely articles.

I'm interested to hear other blogger's takes on this. Which is better, lots of really fresh content bits, or a few well written pieces here and there?

Writebacks:

deathslilsister :

ouch, this is a long one...

As always, it depends on the blogger. There are several people I would love to see something from every day, because when they -do- write, even if it is sparingly, it's always interesting. I appreciate those more than other blogs that have content every day only for content's sake, because the quality isn't always there. I've been of two minds on the same thing-- Do I post a silly meme so people know I'm still alive, or do I wait and actually write? It's always strange to see the response from the handful of people who read me, too-- I shouldn't keep track of comments as a statment on the value of my writing, but I always get more response to the short, throwaway entries than the long and personal entries or to my stories.

The problem with "timely" is that, in this format, it changes so fast-- it really is hard to put together anything good on a subject before it's old news. It's one of the reasons I don't talk about politics on my blog, (I just figure by the time I get around to it, someone else has said it first or better than I can, usually one of my friends) but I don't mind hearing other people's take on an event days after, even a week or more after, it happens.

All the best advice on writing that I've read is just that: write as much and as often as you can-- everybody (Neil, Wil, several other writers I like) says so. Whether that's writing a nugget for every couple of days or working for a few minutes a day on a longer piece probably doesn't matter in the long run--you'll still be using your voice and your style every day and getting words down, which is probably the most important thing, the thing that will move you forward. Blogs are for other people, if they weren't we'd still be writing in paper journals, but you're still the writer.

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