Which Autore Discussed The Writing Process In An Interview?

2025-09-05 21:46:22 238

3 Answers

Hudson
Hudson
2025-09-06 07:54:53
Okay, so short and casual take: many authors talk about their writing process in interviews, but a few pop up again and again in my playlist. Stephen King is the classic practical guy (see 'On Writing'); Neil Gaiman is the lyrical explainer who blends myth and craft; Brandon Sanderson gives the mechanical nuts-and-bolts we can actually practice — he’s all over 'Writing Excuses'.

Beyond those three, I love reading the long interviews in 'The Paris Review' because they dig into habits and the weird little rituals successful writers keep. If you’re trying to find a specific interview, drop a line about where you saw it (YouTube, a magazine, a podcast) and I’ll help hunt it down — I get weirdly excited about tracking down author chats, honestly.
Ben
Ben
2025-09-08 04:14:02
Wow, that question makes me want to curl up with a stack of interviews and a notebook — there are actually a bunch of authors who talk about their writing process in interviews, so the quick way I handle this is to point to a few reliable names and places. Stephen King has been famously candid about craft for decades; his book 'On Writing' is part memoir, part manual, and he follows that up with lots of interviews where he clarifies how routine, revision, and reading shaped his work. Neil Gaiman also opens up a lot in conversations about inspiration versus discipline and how myth and comics feed his novels.

If you want practical, workshop-style talk, Brandon Sanderson is gold — he discusses plotting, revision, and pacing not only on panels but on the podcast 'Writing Excuses' where he breaks down techniques episode by episode. For a different angle, writers featured in 'The Paris Review' interviews (those long-form Q&As) reveal intimate process details — how they draft, what rituals they keep, and how they defeat the blank page. If you tell me the interview you’re thinking of, I can narrow it down, but if you’re exploring generally, start with King, Gaiman, Sanderson, and the long-form pieces in 'The Paris Review'.
Nicholas
Nicholas
2025-09-11 14:01:17
Alright, let's get into the fun part — multiple authors have discussed their process, but I’d spotlight a few that I circle back to whenever I’m stuck. Stephen King lays out his routine and revision philosophy in 'On Writing' and in many follow-up chats; he’s pragmatic about showing up and cutting out the nonsense. Neil Gaiman talks more about myth, voice, and how much daydreaming actually counts as research; his interviews often feel like storytelling lessons more than technical workshops.

If you want concrete craft talk, Brandon Sanderson is one of my go-tos. He breaks plot architecture and revision down in ways that make them feel learnable, especially on 'Writing Excuses' — it’s basically craft-school-lite for busy people. Then there are the long-form interviews in 'The Paris Review' where different authors reveal surprising little habits: some edit obsessively, some draft feverishly and revise later. It’s a mix, and that’s the comforting thing — there’s no single right way.

If you had a specific interview in mind, tell me the name or the outlet and I’ll track down who said what and where. Otherwise, those names should keep you busy for nights of reading and note-taking.
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