Writing is an art form, and as such is an expression of one’s self whose style and flow are to be critiqued only in your own mind. There will always be others that don’t agree with how or what you write about, but the key is not to let that discourage you from continuing to create. Authors, intellectuals, and commoners alike can debate for ages over what style is best and best suited per scenario but ultimately it comes down to personal preferences. This quote resonated for me because I in fact despised English courses in high school because of my teacher my sophomore year in which I composed a narrative that because my teacher didn’t enjoy how I used dialogue and I received a C+ for a piece that I felt was some of my best writing. Ever since then I’ve felt like all English teachers have far too much control over grading due to the fact that it’s so subjective.
This quote also speaks to me about peer editing and revising one's pieces of literature. All too often, a peer edit results in a brief skim through that lives the author with little to address than a few punctuation errors and an improper use of first person viewpoint. While many grammatical errors can take away from the author's purpose and the points he or she is making, a piece of writing doesn't really grow or develop into something great unless an editor digs deeper than the ascetics of a work. Disputes over grammar are, in all actuality, pointless and an utter waste of time for an author to concern themselves over especially if they are dealing with a time constraint. Jack Lynch speaks to all authors, aspiring or well-established, when in this quote that resonates that the message of the words on the page are vastly more important than the form they were written in or whether a misspelling or two occurred along the way.
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