Some great new Anonymous Questions have landed, my friends. Here’s the first:

It’s a wonderful question but, folks, I’m not the person to ask. I have zero literary talent. I can’t talk about literary writing as anybody but a reader. If anybody is interested in the differences between different types of scholarly writing, I have a lot to say.
We have actual writers here, so maybe they can answer.
Here’s another question:

That’s a very important question because many people are experiencing this. Of course, nobody can cure anxiety over the Internet but there are ways to keep it at bay. Here is one useful strategy:
Be like a recovering alcoholic and make one day your main unit of time and your #1 focus. Plan your day carefully, dwell on how you want to spend its different parts. Whenever your brain skips to what will happen in a year, bring it gently to this day. Are you enjoying the day? What would make the experience more pleasant? At the end of the day, think back to its most enjoyable moments, try to relive them. If there was a particularly good cup of coffee, breath of air, feeling of warmth, think about them and decide how you will maximize such moments the next day.
This is a good strategy for all sorts of things. Writer’s block, lack of focus, feeling overwhelmed, pain management, grief. Concentrate on a very small stretch of time. Try to squeeze all you can from it.
Or a very small number of words. For writers: don’t write a novel. Write a sentence. For readers ” don’t read 5 books a month. Read 3 sentences but right now.
Every time you feel a tendency to lose yourself in future events, enormous projects and daunting plans, veer away and go small.