Stewart said:
Why not? Helen Oyeyemi was only fifteen or sixteen when she wrote The Icarus Girl
She was seventeen, still impressive. And she wrote the entire novel in seven weeks, if I recall correctly.
Mary Shelley was only nineteen when she wrote Frankenstein, although the times have changed since then.
How so?
But, if you want to write a book, start writing some short stories first and forget about a book.
I disagree with this. I've written almost three books now. I say almost, I don't mean two and a half, or anything, but three incomplete (but all longer than 100,000 words each) novels. One at seventeen, which is teenage romance rubbish, two very recently, this year, which are adult rubbish. And very few short stories.
The more short stories you write, the less chance you have of abandoning them and becoming disillusioned.
Disagree with this too. Short stories are very hard to write. You have to get your story and work out a way of saying it, omitting the detail you would usually include. With a novel, you can just write and write and write, and you know you will need to go back over it anyway. With a short story you are conscious of every unecessary word, and that details are to be limited. It's easy to become disillusioned when you have an idea of a story, but when you go to write it, you find a different story appearing to what you intended.
But everyone is different.
Also, the more time you work on them, you should be able to grow as a writer faster because you are constantly working with new people rather than languishing over the same people for pages and pages and pages and.......p a g e s
That's likely true.
Good luck with it, Bookworm Beauty. Just write whatever you want, whether or not you have a story "idea" and you'll find it will probably come together somehow.