Edited by Jonathan Vernon, Monday 4 January 2016 at 16:11
I caught this in the introduction to Desert Islands Discs on Sunday.
Thinking is often the enemy of rhythm , you start something because an image a character a moment a scene moves almost of its own accord into rhythm. It seems to want to become a sentence.With writing thinking is often the enemy of rhythm , you start something because an image a character a moment a scene moves almost of its own accord into rhythm. It seems to want to become a sentence.
Colm Toibin goes on to describe what he needs to write: solitude, peace and silence.
Colm Toibin goes on to describe what he needs to write: solitude, peace and silence.
Colm Toibin on writing
I caught this in the introduction to Desert Islands Discs on Sunday.
Thinking is often the enemy of rhythm , you start something because an image a character a moment a scene moves almost of its own accord into rhythm. It seems to want to become a sentence.With writing thinking is often the enemy of rhythm , you start something because an image a character a moment a scene moves almost of its own accord into rhythm. It seems to want to become a sentence.
Colm Toibin goes on to describe what he needs to write: solitude, peace and silence.
Colm Toibin goes on to describe what he needs to write: solitude, peace and silence.