Recently, I enjoyed reading Eric Maisel’s A Writer’s Space, Make Room to Dream, to Work, to Write (Adams Media 2008).
Similar in pacing to my books Writer Mama and Get Known, A Writer’s Space is written in short, easy-to-absorb chapters that make it easier to squeeze into a busy schedule like mine.
Since we’ve recently moved into a new home, I was primed for a discussion of how a writer carves out a room of his or her own. But I was delighted to discover that this book covers the deeper implications of the topic of space, and not merely the challenges of arranging our physical world.
Of course it does, since A Writer’s Space is written by counselor, therapist, and coach Eric Maisel, whose other incredibly helpful books include A Life in the Arts and Toxic Criticism.
I think when Eric Maisel writes on these kinds of topics, where he has clearly established a wealth of expertise based on many years of experience and study, he writes at his best. Like a true master, he is able to offer readers many thoughtful take-aways without ever seeming condescending or belying how many times he must have covered this same territory without becoming weary of it. In fact, many chapters on what might otherwise be dry topics are playfully literary in the hands of such a skillful writer in his own right.
If you have not had a chance to pick up, A Writer’s Space by Eric Maisel, PH.D., I highly recommend it, especially for the writer who is having difficulty establishing enough “space” to get his or her writing done in a way that is satisfying and fulfilling.
Enjoy!
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