The above quote is from the below video, which I’ve been watching as background research for some client work:
The Power of Abstraction – YouTube
Liskov is a very highly regarded computer scientist, and in that sound bite I used as the title she’s talking about programming (in a great deal of detail that is largely inscrutable to me, just yet), not books of any sort. But I believe what she says here applies to *all* writing, from fiction and creative essays to workaday ad copy and stereo instructions. My sound-biting also makes it sound like she’s saying that reading (e.g., to expand your own knowledge) is more important than creating new stuff. Although I *also* believe that, she’s actually saying something different. Here’s the pertinent bit of her talk, in its entirety (from around 17m37s into the video):
In other words, hers is a strictly–and gloriously–Utilitarian claim: For the good of the many, our focus (as people-writing-things) should not be on expressing that which we want to express, but in expressing things in a way most thoroughly intelligible to readers.
Depending on what kind of writing you think of as “writing” (and the value you place on “self-expression” *shudders*) you may believe something very different than this. That’s nice. But regardless of how you feel about this approach, I *can* tell you from personal experience that when you set your mind on writing for longterm readability (rather than self-expression), you get paid better, have a *much* easier time selling your creative work, and people generally like you more.