From Writers with Love
Extracts from books, guides and articles I believe will make me a better writer. They may help you too…This week KAREN PALMER

Ideas flow when the body is occupied but the mind is unbound. At the desk, the phone is too often near; the screen issues its siren’s call. A car on the other hand is a contained world with ever-shifting vistas….

…I slipped under Barstow’s bridges at 85 mph, and I shifted into a slightly altered state, one in which a fix for an essay I’d been working on for weeks presented itself. I thought about pulling over and making notes — memory being a trickster these days — but decided not to. I said the words aloud. Repetition melded with the hum of the car’s engine, while mile after mile monochromatic scenery rolled past. By the time I reached Richfield, Utah, the journey’s halfway point, and checked into a motel, I’d “written” the better part of a novel chapter. I spent the evening hours getting everything down. Sentences begat more sentences. It felt like taking dictation. Which, in a way, it was…
Read the article in full on Lit Hub and stay to see what else they have to offer. It is a daily American website that specialises is literary fiction and nonfiction.
Karen Palmer is an award-winning American writer of fiction and nonfiction. Her memoir about escaping a violent marriage She’s Under There has just been published.
Picture Credits: Orange open road – Lit Hub
Driving – by Alex Chernenko on Unsplash
Hi Bridget, How are you? Valerie de Schaller here, a past student. Wanted to comment on the driving to Utah story but the system said No! So here it is, fingers crossed… “Driving out of town on an adventure definitely frees the mind of day-to-day preoccupations and restrictions. My best ideas and creative solutions come to me on the move with my cat in the passenger seat.” Hope you’re well. I moved to Newcastle 3 years ago to do an MA, n have now settled here for good. Love the people and the architecture! How about you? Take care, Valerie
Yahoo Mail: Search, organise, conquer
Lovely to hear from you, Valerie. And how exciting to hear you’ve moved to Newcastle, a very creative city. I’m not surprised you have decided to stay. Hope you are still writing and still enjoying it.