Of course a good writer thinks! But thinking is not the
same thing as filling your head with facts, names and dates, adding one
person's opinion to a stack of others, or making your skull ring with proverbs
and clichés. It means noticing relationships, raising questions, testing
feelings and opinions, asking how something can be proved true.
A good writer tries to balance thinking about a subject
with thinking about the approach to the subject. "Have I got the evidence
I need to prove that World War I began in 1914?" (a seemingly easy
question) might turn into an interesting problem if the writer asks,
"What do I mean by 'began'?" "How far can I trace the war's
origins?" A good writer seeks definitions of the terms he uses or is
asked to use; he looks for many meanings instead of just one.
A good writer also asks about his own biases and
conditioning, about the influence of popular opinion, TV, films, journalism,
on his opinions. He is willing to admit that he might be wrong, and looks for
ways in which he can be right without being dogmatic. He may want to say,
"Of course Amherst is better than Williams," but since he knows that
statement won't go unchallenged in the wider world, he says, "I prefer
Amherst to Williams because it has access to a larger community," keeping
in mind that unless he has visited Williams, he won't know for sure.
What
Is A Good Writer?
A
Good Writer Thinks
A Good Writer Takes Time
A
Good Writer Revises