On Writing
I receive a lot of questions about writing: the craft, the source of ideas, getting it into a good state. So….
As with any craft there are many, many books out there which will guide you with the process. If I had to name one I would suggest Stephen King, On Writing. In that he gives you the key: you must practise your craft by writing, by writing regularly and writing a lot.
If you are serious about become a good writer, you must write every day. No excuses. Get up and write.
Ideas come from observation. I write fiction. An idea for my spy story Bram came when I was in a coffee shop and someone near me was spreading their papers and I could see that several were marked confidential. What if? What if he were doing it deliberately? That became a chapter in Bram.
I write non-fiction. Those ideas come from my own challenges on productivity or AI or the expressed concerns of my audience.
In either case, observe and note. Not every idea is a novel or a book. But it might be.
My non-fiction has a precise structure. My fiction has a loose structure as I know that as I write ideas will come .
For both the idea is to generate quantity and then edit to produce quality. My experience is that the process of producing the error free text is very much a long tail. Do not ignore it.
And AI? Do not use it to write for you; you will lose your voice, your soul and your magic. But by all means get it to do some research for you.
I hope that helps. Go write.