Wayne Miller Recommends...

“(1) Most important, I recommend patience—which I have to remind myself of all the time. So often, I get excited about a poem in progress and start to spin my wheels, which I do for a week or two until it’s time to set the poem aside. Then, sometimes months later, I find a new angle or approach and the poem begins to move again.

Incidentally, the same is true for reading. How often did I read a brilliant writer and think I disliked his/her work when I just wasn’t ready for it?

(2) I like to look at historical photographs of places I know intimately—cities and towns I’ve lived in, etcetera. I think it’s good for writing to imagine the present moment as just the pinhole in a camera—all that past beyond it, like the boundless world flooding in and through the tiny lens of one’s moment.

Not a bad way to think about one’s own writing in the context of literature, either.”
Wayne Miller, author of The Book of Props (Milkweed Editions, 2009)

Please log in to continue.
LOG IN
Don’t yet have an account?
Register for a free account.