International bestselling author and critically acclaimed screenwriter of Room — Emma Donoghue — talked with me about her writing process and adapting her best known work into an award-winning movie.
In addition to writing for the screen, stage, and radio over her prolific career, the multi-genre author has had her popular fiction translated into over 40 languages. Her 2010 novel Room was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize and won a New York Times Book of the Year award, among others.
The film adaptation of the book has been nominated for four Oscars — including Best Adapted Screenplay — for Ms. Donoghue’s stunning first full-length script.
Room (2015) boasts 54 international award wins and 102 nominations (as of this writing), including nods from The Golden Globes, Critics’ Choice Movie Awards, Screen Actors Guild Awards, AFI Awards, Independent Spirit Awards, and the Toronto International Film Festival.
Join us for this two-part interview. If you missed the first half you can find it here: How Emma Donoghue (Bestselling Author of ‘Room’) Writes: Part One
In Part Two of the file Emma Donoghue and I discuss:
- Why Setting Constraints Can Help Your Writing
- How Writing for Yourself Is the Key to Success
- Why a Great Screenwriter Can’t Recall any Movie Quotes
- How Planning Is the Rope that Guides Your Writing through the Wilderness
Listen to The Writer Files: Writing, Productivity, Creativity, and Neuroscience below ...

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