It’s 4:21 a.m. There’s a pain behind my right eye.
The damn thing’s woken me up again. My novel-in-progress (or lack of
progress), that is.
Because even though I’ve published
three novels and been writing professionally for over twenty years, I have no
idea how to write this novel.
There are fragments. Scenes I absolutely adore. Characters ready to burst out of my
brain, Aliens-style. But I don’t know where these bits
belong. Why they belong. How they fit into the whole.
I wish some writer could give me a
neat, EASY answer.
For now, I’m grateful for those who
are honest about the hard parts of this process.
While there are authors who make
this novel-writing thing look as easy as throwing a cake together (apologies to
cake bakers), I appreciate those who share the sweaty, anxiety-ridden truth about
the messy, mysterious, maddening process.
There’s Jacqueline Woodson . . .
She wrote: “You’re writing, you’re coasting, and
you’re thinking, ‘This is the best thing I’ve ever written, and it’s coming so
easily, and these characters are so great.’ You put it aside for whatever
reason, and you open it up a week later and the characters have turned to
cardboard and the book has completely fallen apart. That’s the moment of truth
for every writer: Can I go on from here and make this book into something? I
think it separates the writers from the nonwriters. And I think it’s the reason
a lot of people have that unfinished manuscript around the house, that
albatross,” which Laurie Halse Anderson shared on this blog post.
Later, Jacqueline Woodson tweeted, “My book is falling apart. I should keep writing but grabbing a towel &
heading down to the water. Maybe the answer will ebb in with the tide.”
There’s Sherman Alexie, who, during
a talk in front of a thousand people at an S.C.B.W.I. conference, admitted to
waking in the middle of the night with insomnia because of his struggle with
the words.
There’s Sharon Creech, whose books
I so admire for their simplicity and their heart. She shared this wonderful photo of the reams of paper/vision
and revision/perhaps 4 a.m. wake up calls that were required to produce her
latest effort.
This is what she wrote about that
photo on her blog:
“three years of work
six drafts
of one book:
The Great Unexpected
(due out 4 September)
By the time
I reach this phase
it's a bit like having been pregnant
for ten months
maybe eleven
and I am thinking
I did the best I could
do
I love it
but
GET IT OUTTA HERE!”
Thanks God for honest writers!
Because at 4:19 a.m. (It’s 5:33
a.m. now) with this pain behind my right eye that’s slowly fading, it feels
like I may never find my way through this elusive tangle of words.
But I’ll gently remind myself to
breath: “Breath, damn it!”
I’ll remember I’ve been in this
uncomfortable place before. (It’s
why I hesitate mightily before beginning each new novel.)
When the book is finally written
and rewritten – because it will be – I’ll relish the feeling, no matter how
fleeting . . . until it’s time to write the next novel. And the next.
And it’s all exactly as it should
be -- this crazy, wonderful writing life.
Even the messy, uncomfortable bits. Maybe especially those bits because they are what make us
human.
Back to it now . . . because
sometimes the only way is to write your way though.
13 comments:
Very interesting. Kept me reading, although I'm glad it wasn't at 4:00 a.m. :)
If you're in Hampton Roads, we could get together. I know Sue from ... hmm, CNU Writers' Conference, I think. She lives about 5 miles from me. I used to attend one of her groups, in Williamsburg, but I fell off the planet.
Oops. If I'd read your bio, I would have seen that you write children's and YA. :)
Thanks for your comment, Terry. I don't live locally. Met Sue when she lived in FL. We'll have to share a virtual cup of coffee then. :)
Author Jo Knowles offers terrific writerly wisdom on her blog today: http://jbknowles.livejournal.com/463029.html (Especially meaningful if you're a runner, too.)
Donna, You always seem to write the best blog posts - just when I need them. I, too, am struggling to work on a wip that a few months ago, I just couldn't put down. The characters were talking in my head, the scenes were moving so fast, I could hardly keep up. Now, I sit down, I wait politely for the characters to talk to me. Nothing. Where are they? Probably sulking in a corner of my brain I don't even know exists (they are pre-teens after all and I have been ignoring them). Ah, life.. how it interferes with our best laid plans - and plots. Good luck to you as you search for your words. As for me, I'm plying my characters with chocolate chip cookies maybe that will help. (Let's hope they don't get mad and send them to my hips!)
Jen,
I plied my characters with chocolate chip cookies today, too! (Okay, I actually plied my hips with them, but that's not important now.)
You've had a lot going on lately. I'm sure when there's space in your brain, your characters will come stomping back. And you'll be right there to welcome them back.
Good luck,
Donna
Your post reminded me of my grandma’s favorite saying:
"Why should it be easy when it can be hard?"
Thanks for the comfort - so good to be in this together.
Here's a book recommendation to help get you through. It's helped me and is as good as Anne Lamott's Bird by Bird (really!)
It's 'A Year of Writing Dangerously' by Barbara Abercrombie
:)
Mirka, those are some wise words from your grandma. Thanks for sharing them.
Pippa, that book sounds great. I'm getting it now. Your blog is great, by the way.
Nice to know we're in good company when we're staring at a blank screen!
I was avoiding my WIP for a couple weeks for some reason; all I can figure out is that I'm afraid it won't turn out as awesome on the page as it is in my head. But I've been getting back to it, a little at a time, reminding myself that no one will read this draft.
Only one manuscript about the house? Only one useless lump of printed garbage? I wish.
I've got four of the things and they are no good.
They contain some good stuff and even some good ideas, but they are either mawkishly sentimental or characters having a good rant.
And what looks like gold on the page one day turns into coal dust overnight.
Boo Hoo!
Lynne, I completely understand. There are so many internal blocks to our writing. May I recommend a wonderful book -- The Courage to Write: How Writers Transcend by Ralph Keyes. I found it inspiring and uplifting.
patwoodblogging, I am surrounded by piles of pages -- bits and characters and ideas and partially finished novels and completely finished unpublishable novels. They somehow make their way into my current novels. They seep in. It's all part of the messy, miraculous process. I found the book Story by Robert McKee to be helpful to learn how to structure the bits into a workable whole. Good luck to you!
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