“I hate politics. I like to write
about it, but to get involved in it, to try and make a lot of ignorant people
do what you want them to do, waste of time. Go and write a book. It's more
important and it'll last longer.” –
Wilbur Smith
Born in northern Rhodesia (now
Zambia) on this date in 1933, Smith was the son of a metal worker turned
rancher. He grew up on that ranch then
worked as a police officer and accountant before turning to his real love –
writing. After being rejected multiple times, he finally broke
through with When The Lion Feeds, leading to a spectacular writing
career that produced 5 dozen novels.
He followed his initial book with
three long series about the South African experience, all bestsellers. Then he wrote a series of historical novels
set in Ancient Egypt, the last three co-authored with Mark Chadbourn and
released after his death in 2021. That
series started with 1993’s River God and ended with 2023’s Testament.
Many of his books also have been made into popular movies.
His advice to new writers was
simple: “Write for yourself, not for a perceived audience . . . because it's
impossible to judge what people want. And
you have to read. That's how you learn what is good writing and what is bad.
Then the main thing is application. It's hard work.”
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