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Deleted member 42060
Guest
I have this mindset that I need to read many fantasy books before I write fantasy. So I procrastinate on writing by reading so that my expertise in lore and worldbuilding will improve—however, I have this annoying, impatient urge to write, convincing me that you can only improve by writing, just like how you don’t passively watch programming videos, but you actually do the programming.
Do you also feel the same? Like before you write sci-fi, you need to read one hundred sci-fi books so that your knowledge about sci-fi will broaden. I consider myself dumb when it comes to writing sociology, urging me to read more first before writing the novel to avoid superficialities. Now that I’ve finished my first novel, which was relatively easy to write, I’m planning to write fantasy, which is out of my expertise (I don’t know feudalism and shit). So…yeah, what do I do? Write while having little knowledge about typical medieval fantasy and read fantasy books along the way (and regret it because I’ll have grasped the knowledge about dioceses and Pastafarianism, and I could have added that to my previous chapters)? Ignorance is a scary thing.
(Sometimes, I just want to be omniscient.)
Do you also feel the same? Like before you write sci-fi, you need to read one hundred sci-fi books so that your knowledge about sci-fi will broaden. I consider myself dumb when it comes to writing sociology, urging me to read more first before writing the novel to avoid superficialities. Now that I’ve finished my first novel, which was relatively easy to write, I’m planning to write fantasy, which is out of my expertise (I don’t know feudalism and shit). So…yeah, what do I do? Write while having little knowledge about typical medieval fantasy and read fantasy books along the way (and regret it because I’ll have grasped the knowledge about dioceses and Pastafarianism, and I could have added that to my previous chapters)? Ignorance is a scary thing.
(Sometimes, I just want to be omniscient.)