4.0 out of 5 stars
Worthwhle read, July 11 2004
By A Customer
I have read one other of Natalie's books and at one point during that first book, I was a bit put off by the journal-style, flow-of-consciousness writing. At the time, I was searching for a quick fix or perhaps I just wanted nuts-and-bolts direction. And sometimes, encountering a lot of chatter over a writer's psyche, I do want to say, "Oh what's with all the melodrama? Just tell the wanna-be that they need to be damned good story-tellers and be done with it!"
But then, Natalie Goldberg practices Zen meditation. She grew up in the 60s, too, a time when inner musings were given their due in the public forum of Hippie-dom. And if you know anything about Eastern philosophies, you should at least garner that patience is a virtue and that you are not reading Strunk and White.
Anyway, after a chapter or two, Natalie began to discuss exactly the problem I was having with my novel, a problem I'd just begun to point out to myself but still wasn't quite sure what it entailed. And then Natalie described herself in the same place at one time. Problem: stalling in one's story because the writer is trying too damned hard to control the characters, who they are, etc. It helped, exceedingly, to learn her explanation for it.
The same thing occurred in the next chapter, and the next.
I've read many how-to writing books over the years ( you can put off writing indefinitely so long as you got something to read) and that I came across this book at this time could be deemed one of those little coincidences. These may have been some obscure how-to questions; not every writer may ask and another author might have brushed past them.
So don't knock the Zen. When the student is ready, the teacher appears.
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1.0 out of 5 stars
Bleh., Mar 19 2004
This review is from: Thunder and Lightning: Cracking Open the Writer's Craft (Hardcover)
A babbling stream of zen consciousness nonsense. This book may be interesting to those who like new age poetry but if you're primarily looking to improve your writing craft - seek elsewhere. There are a few nuggets of helpful wisdom here, but they are buried by reams of meandering memoir.
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3.0 out of 5 stars
GET PAST THE ACCENT, Sep 2 2002
By A Customer
I would have thought that Natalie Goldberg would have had the decency to hire a professional reader for this book. I like some of the things that she says about writing but they lose their credibility because I am constantly holding back my right index finger from hitting the "eject" button on my car's tape player simply because her voice is incredibly annoying! I can only listen to about 10 minutes of this at a time. Also, if you are a guy, you have to get past all of the more feminine comments such as her calling herself "Natalie, darling" a half a dozen times along with other assorted Natalie-only references such as talking about eating, chocolate, and her book "Bananna Rose". I would say that 50% of this book is kind of a self-serving memoir written by Natalie Goldberg (although to hear her say "memoir" still makes me cringe). If you have a convenient "fast-forward" mechanism on your tape player, then there is much that she says that holds water. You just have to wade through a lot of overhead to get to it. If you can't stand the sound of a New York accent then KEEP AWAY! In a regular book your imagination can choose to use whatever voice you are comfortable with - in an audiocasette, you have to listen to the one that's on the tape and in this case (even though I love most of her work) her voice is best kept for scolding kids or shouting across busy poolrooms.
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