One of the first things students considering a major in writing need to understand is that they do not have to be geniuses to be good writers. The myth of the writer as genius is probably the single greatest obstacle that otherwise interested, talented and hardworking students have to overcome to pursue a career path in writing.
It doesn’t help that actual geniuses like James Baldwin have given talks like “The Artist’s Struggle for Integrity” in which he says: “It would seem to me . . . that the poets . . . are finally the only people who know the truth. Soldiers don’t, statesmen don’t, priests don’t, union leaders don’t. Only the poets.”
And the fact is, there are a few geniuses like James Baldwin out there who do seem to be channeling truth from the ethers. It is this handful of writers like Jonathan Safran Foer (whose college thesis became the novel Everything is Illuminated) or Joyce Carol Oates (who once admitted she cannot recall how many books she has published) or Sherman Alexie (who is said to have read The Grapes of Wrath at age five) that make my writing students believe they cannot possibly be real writers, because real writers’ prose flows effortlessly and gets published instantly, and does not return to them littered with my comments about comma splices.