"I like playing around with the words; I love it when I feel like I've picked the exact right word to describe whatever it is I'm trying to describe"
About this Quote
There is a quiet flex in Haddix framing writing as play and precision at the same time. “Playing around” signals looseness, experimentation, the permission to be messy on the way to something clean. Then she snaps the focus to the real drug: the “exact right word.” That pivot captures the central paradox of good prose and especially good genre storytelling (Haddix is best known for plot-driven, high-concept YA): the work looks effortless only after it’s been wrestled into place.
The repetition of “describe… trying to describe” is doing more than filling space. It performs the hunt. You can hear the mind circling an idea, testing angles, refusing the first approximation. Haddix isn’t romanticizing inspiration; she’s romanticizing calibration. The pleasure isn’t in having big feelings, it’s in landing the word that makes a fuzzy thought click into focus for a reader who has never been inside your head.
Subtextually, it’s an argument against the myth that writing is either pure self-expression or purely technical craft. Haddix claims both: joy and rigor. In the context of children’s and young adult literature - often patronized as “easy” - the line reads like a defense of micro-level decision-making. In suspense narratives where a single adjective can tilt the temperature of a scene, “exact” isn’t pedantry; it’s control. Her intent is almost pedagogical: if you want to write, fall in love with the smallest unit of meaning, because that’s where the magic and the power live.
The repetition of “describe… trying to describe” is doing more than filling space. It performs the hunt. You can hear the mind circling an idea, testing angles, refusing the first approximation. Haddix isn’t romanticizing inspiration; she’s romanticizing calibration. The pleasure isn’t in having big feelings, it’s in landing the word that makes a fuzzy thought click into focus for a reader who has never been inside your head.
Subtextually, it’s an argument against the myth that writing is either pure self-expression or purely technical craft. Haddix claims both: joy and rigor. In the context of children’s and young adult literature - often patronized as “easy” - the line reads like a defense of micro-level decision-making. In suspense narratives where a single adjective can tilt the temperature of a scene, “exact” isn’t pedantry; it’s control. Her intent is almost pedagogical: if you want to write, fall in love with the smallest unit of meaning, because that’s where the magic and the power live.
Quote Details
| Topic | Writing |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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