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tommyhousworth 's review for:
Julia Cameron certainly makes one feel like they should write, often and without hesitation. Essentially, she holds up the banner of writing for the sake of writing, not for publication or profit.
It's therapeutic. It teaches us to be better communicators and human beings. It's spiritual. It invites us to be creators rather than spectators. Cameron captures a certain passion that makes the reader hungry to break out pen and journal.
There are moments of navel gazing and self-congratulatory passages that are, perhaps, unavoidable. Still, The Right to Write reminds us that we are all creative beings, and the act of writing should be done not to gain notoriety, but to gain access to an untapped part of our own spirits and souls.
It's therapeutic. It teaches us to be better communicators and human beings. It's spiritual. It invites us to be creators rather than spectators. Cameron captures a certain passion that makes the reader hungry to break out pen and journal.
There are moments of navel gazing and self-congratulatory passages that are, perhaps, unavoidable. Still, The Right to Write reminds us that we are all creative beings, and the act of writing should be done not to gain notoriety, but to gain access to an untapped part of our own spirits and souls.