So far, we’ve explored Damien Farnsworths’ four qualities of remarkable writers in “Are You a Remarkable Writer? (Parts 2 and Parts 3). They have the ability to size up content, connect the dots, express ideas clearly and write in their head. Did you see yourself in these four? We have two more to go…

5. Remarkable writers read with a deep purpose

There are three kinds of readers.

  • Libertarian – He is free to read whatever he wants. Whenever he wants. However he wants. Scan his reading history and you’ll see Mashable blog posts, Stieg Larsson novels, National Geographic magazines and bottles of shampoo. Think promiscuity.
  • Social conservatives – He is a little more purposeful in what he reads. He might grab the Atlantic Wire’s Beach Reads for Smart People or be a member of Oprah’s reading club. Either way he narrows his reading scope by taking cues from social authorities.
  • Extremists – This is the PhD preparing for her doctorate in medieval chemistry. The defense attorney hunkered in the library to bone up on local moonshine statutes. The writer working on a memoir of Hungarian-Jewish physician Joseph Goldberger. The writer is absorbed (and obsessed) with one topic — and one topic alone.

Remarkable writers absorb their books. For long stretches of time. Clueless to the rest of the world. Of course, writers can’t exactly claim a monopoly on this trait. The next trait, however, they most definitely can.

6. Remarkable writers swing the snow shovel

Editing a long document is sort of like shoveling snow off a sidewalk while it is still snowing. #writing.

— Demian Farnworth (@demianfarnworth) November 15, 2012

That’s my metaphor for rewriting. Let me explain.

It begins with a foot of snow (you dump a rough draft on to the blank page). You start to shovel (edit) down the sidewalk (page). You reach the end of the sidewalk (page), wipe your brow with your cap and look behind you. My goodness, you didn’t realize it started snowing while you were still shoveling (it hardly looks like your editing job put a dent in your rough draft).

And boy, it sure is coming down fast.

You shrug, put your cap back on, lower the shovel and scoop. On and on. American novelist, critic and essayist Walter Kirn expressed it this way:

At the beginning of a novel, a writer needs confidence, but after that what’s required is persistence. These traits sound similar. They aren’t. Confidence is what politicians, seducers, and currency speculators have, but persistence is a quality found in termites. It’s the blind drive to keep on working that persists after confidence breaks down.

That ability to re-work a piece of copy ad nauseum is utterly unique to a writer. No other profession can claim that ability. And that, my friend, is what separates a remarkable writer from everyone else.

Did you see yourself in this list of six? I admit I identified at least three of them that applies to me, sizing up content, connecting the dots and writing in my head. I am striving to get the next three. We’re beginning a new year. It’s time for me to improve. That’s how we grow.

In closing, try this experiment …

So, did I do it? Did I describe traits that are utterly unique to writers?

To find out, let’s try this little experiment: remove the headline and evaluate the list based upon what I wrote. And then ask this question: is it unique to writers?

About the Author: Demian Farnworth is Chief Copywriter for Copyblogger Media. Follow him on Twitter or Google+.

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