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fivecats ([personal profile] fivecats) wrote2006-02-21 10:03 pm
Entry tags:

Parlour Tricks


1925

1925

February 2006 Raleigh, NC

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When I sit down to type out an entry, say, like this one, I simply sit and I type.  The words flow fairly easily, with few hesitations or concerns.  I think, I type.  Pretty simple, really.  People I used to write letters to told that my writing reads much the way I talk (to me this means "full of grandeous self-importance, occasional humor and overly long complex sentences that make me really glad I never learned how to diagram a sentence because I might feel bad about how overly long and awkward they really were.") which I regarded as a compliment.

So then why is "real" writing so dangedably difficult?

I'll spare you the whining,
After putting a lot of time and effort into long, long blog entries that would take days to write and re-write, I stopped blogging completely to devote my time to writing my Victorian-era kids novel.  That was the theory, at any rate.  I got a rough draft of a part of the first chapter written down (now lost) and then found myself seeking out all sorts of other distractions to keep me from writing.

Writing letters and blog entries is just so much easier.

And then, last August a good LJ friend (who I hope doesn't mind me anonymously quoting him) wrote to me, praising my writing in my blog entries and posed a question to me that stopped me in my tracks.
"I'll ask you the same question someone asked me a decade ago: With all your magical talents, do you you really want to spend your time doing nothing but simple parlor tricks?"
Man, I just hate it when someone nails me like that.

No.  Of course not.  Hasn't that been the goal all along?  Getting published?

Still, I find that I'm very comfortable with one style of writing (self-obsessed ranting and raving, turning Real Life into personal narratives) and original fiction is like, well, worse than pulling teeth.

The other night I sat down to write out the first chapter of the Victorian-era book.  It's a scene I've played over and over in my head for well over a  year.  It's a good scene, a good start to the book, with action and more than enough confusion to keep the reader interested and wanting to read more.  When I started writing all that was coming out was stilted, dry, boring prose.  No, actually, it was worse.  It was dismal, pathetic and dreadful.  Horrid.

However, I resisted the tempation to CTRL + A, Delete everything.  Instead, I dutifully saved what I had written and walked away from it, trying to figure out what had gone so horribly wrong.

A couple of years ago I had a job interview with RIT for a teaching position.  As part of the day-long interview I had to give a 45-minute lecture on a subject of my (their) choosing.  XML was the topic of choice and I frantically learned everything I could about the relatively new markup language.  I then learned PowerPoint, created my lecture slides and started rehearsing.  I rehearsed in front of friends at work, at the airport, on the airplane, in the hotel room the night before.  Just before the lecture was supposed to start I took a few minutes to review the slides... and it was if I'd never seen this material before.  All of  my clever, witty insights?  Gone.  Any semblance of understanding the information, much less being able to communicate it?  Wa-a-a-a-ay gone.

I fumbled through the first few slides, committing the PowerPoint sin of reading exactly what was written on the slides.  Then, after a few minutes, I hit a stride and, managing to shut my conscious mind off, I was able to get through the rest of the lecture about as cleanly as possible.

Performance anxiety, pure and simple.  Big crowd of college professors sitting in judgement of me, sitting between me and my dream of becomming a college professor.

I can stand in front of a large audience and be comfortable -- heck, I taught for enough years to not have that bother me much anymore.  Still, when it counts, at least in my mind, I panic and freeze up. 

I've decided that the "you have got to be kidding" bit of writing that I did for the first chapter needs to be viewed as the barest of frameworks for the house I'm eventually going to be building.  I just need to get the ideas down there and then start idenitifying and filling in the holes.  Those large, cavernous holes.

I've also backtracked and started sketching out those first scenes, identifying what's missing (any sense of place, time, the smells, lighting, dress, etc) and begun making notes on where to insert these all-important items.

I know I can do this.  It's just being far harder than I thought it was going to be.


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[identity profile] smileyfish.livejournal.com 2006-02-22 03:36 am (UTC)(link)
YOu're a brave, brave man. I can't see myself writing anything longer than short stories, and even that is a stretch. A decade ago I challenged myself to write something more than my usual one-page peice. I wrote 4 pages. Good, but stiff stiubbornly short.

Since falling in love with Alex my inner muse has been unusually quiet, and LJ constitutes almost all my writing since then. It's a bit depressing and I ofetn find myself wondering where my imagination has run off to...

Anyway, aside from all that, I think it's antastic that you're even attempting a novel. If you ever want someone to read through and split the hairs, then I'll offer my services. I'll even attempt to restrain myself from 'correcting' American spellings. =op

[identity profile] basefinder.livejournal.com 2006-02-22 05:19 am (UTC)(link)
Never underestimate the power of SmileyProse. The two of you, [profile] smileyfish and [personal profile] fivecats are among my favorite writers. Period. Your styles are vastly different of course, but you each pull me into the moment, if that makes any sense.

Muses are unpredictable things.

[identity profile] fivecats.livejournal.com 2006-02-22 08:12 pm (UTC)(link)
I've had a few ideas on things to write about, but many have been more memoir-ish in nature. Some of those have gotten treatments, initially, as entries here. I feel far more confident about writing some of these things.

The few fiction ideas that have formed in my mind strongly enough to think about writing about have been difficult to work on. The last one suffered a similar fate as this one, with me getting exasperated at how bad the writing was. (Mind you, in the intervening years I've thought through a lot of the plot holes and internal logic of the story so it's considerably stronger than it was when I started writing it. Maybe one day I'll even try to finish it)

Love is a wonderful thing for life in general. It is, however, something that does tend to put a damper on certain artistic outlets. I think this happens, in part, because (a) you're happy and (b) have a reduced need to Express Yourself to a wide audience. Also, that need for acceptance for who and what you are is already being taken care of by the person who loves you back.

Your imagination is still there, it's just that your mind it too preoccupied with other things right now. Some sort of event thingy happening in April or so...

When I'm ready for critical readers, I'll keep your offer in mind. (As for the spelling, I'll just smugly be grateful that you "think it's antastic" that I'm writing) :-)

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(Anonymous) 2006-02-23 10:23 am (UTC)(link)
I think you're right just to get the bloody ideas down on paper, especially any parts that are fun to write, however badly they come out, and then let your obsessive side take it from there through the really frustrating remodeling. Encourage your editorial alter ego by only playing They Might Be Giants when you're working on the book. Or better yet, play Slaughter when you're not working on the book. Apart from ending your marriage, I bet that would be a good strategy.

As for American vs. English spelling, I was so proud this weekend for solving one clue in the London Times crossword to get "labourer." Couldn't do the rest of course.

-Dribbling Drew

[identity profile] fivecats.livejournal.com 2006-02-23 09:44 pm (UTC)(link)
Actually, I'm finding music of just about any kind immensely distracting when I sit down to write this book. Music abounds when I'm writing blog entries, but this is, again, something wholly different.

As for the Times crossword, I tend to stick with the clean logic of numbers and Sudoku these days.

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