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The Midnight Disease
The Midnight Disease: The Drive to Write, Writer's Block, and the Creative Brain | Alice Weaver Flaherty
13 posts | 9 read | 5 to read
Why is it that some writers struggle for months to come up with the perfect sentence or phrase while others, hunched over a keyboard deep into the night, seem unable to stop writing? In The Midnight Disease, neurologist Alice W. Flaherty explores the mysteries of literary creativity: the drive to write, what sparks it, and what extinguishes it. She draws on intriguing examples from medical case studies and from the lives of writers, from Franz Kafka to Anne Lamott, from Sylvia Plath to Stephen King. Flaherty, who herself has grappled with episodes of compulsive writing and block, also offers a compelling personal account of her own experiences with these conditions.
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review
violabrain
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Panpan

I was really excited to read this book about writing by a neurologist, but it‘s a disorganized mess. It reads like an initial draft that nobody edited.

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TK-421
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“Nonetheless, writing regularly, inspiration or no, is not a bad way to eventually get into an inspired mood; the plane has to #bump along the runway for a while before it finally takes off.” #QuotsyJan20

Alora 💜 5y
Deifio Good quote! Writing is something you have to practice, like everything else 5y
58 likes2 comments
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keithmalek
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#7favesin7days 5/8

Post a book you love each day for 7 days, without review or comment, with the hashtag #7favesin7days in your post so we can keep it going!

19 likes1 stack add
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keithmalek

Whether or not alcohol helps any artist in the short term, it appears to hurt creativity in the long run. Tom Dardis has argued persuasively that the reason Faulkner, Hemingway, Fitzgerald, and others did their best work in their twenties and thirties was the progressive brain damage that alcohol caused later in their lives.

Suet624 Hadn't thought of that but it totally makes sense. 7y
17 likes1 comment
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Loreen
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This books subtitle is: The #drive to write, writer's block, and the creative brain. This is a really interesting book. #anditsaugust

26 likes3 stack adds1 comment
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Loreen
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I'm a day behind, but here are my #ThisTitlegreatbandname #marchintoreading I think my favorites are The Midnight Disease and Nickle and Dimed. 😎😎😎

RealLifeReading The Midnight Disease especially! 8y
Loreen I know, right! Somebody needs to snap this up. 😬😬😬 8y
40 likes2 comments
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Dan_SpiderCrafts
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#Pi? #Pie! I didn't have any pie today, but can look forward to a cookie tomorrow. Pondering math, after midnight, has me thinking of creative analysis instead. This was a great read to rewrap my brain around; more or less inspiring on writing endeavours. I'll best save it for later. I'm home from work and ready for bed. #marchintoreading

LeslieO My fav! Timmy Ho's 8y
44 likes1 comment
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kspenmoll
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#17BookLove #NonfictionLove
@jess.how I read non-fiction of all kinds ❤

SaraFair Nickel and Dimed realaly stuck with me. 8y
Dan_SpiderCrafts I enjoyed The Midnight Disease, in mind for another re-read again sometime. 👻 8y
59 likes2 comments
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keithmalek

As many as 0.2 percent of the population consistently associates certain colors with sounds. It runs in families and is more common in women than men.

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keithmalek

A centipede walked past a spider who said: "I can't tell you how much I admire your walking. I can hardly manage my eight legs; how can you possibly manage a hundred?" With that, the centipede, who had never before given his legs a thought, collapsed in a tangle.

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keithmalek

Psychiatric hospitals are not terrible places to write--they bear certain similarities to writers colonies like Yaddo, except that health insurance pays. And except that if you spend too much time in your room writing, "isolative" is entered on your chart.

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keithmalek

I always wrote a little more than was normal, but I was able to keep my tendencies discreet. When occasionally a friend would ask if I ever considered publishing what I wrote, I was puzzled; it seemed such a private pleasure that it was as if someone who thought I was good in bed asked if I had considered doing it in public.

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keithmalek

If we are all a little bit sick, it is not all that sick to be sick. Illness is even sometimes useful. It is easy to forget that whether a behavior is a disease or a gift may depend on its context.