The moment you hint at
wanting to be a writer people will tell you that you write fantastic
letters and that you should write a book! Now there's a thought, how
many pages in a book? Five - six hundred; give or take a couple. Do
you write humorous or serious stuff, maybe a 'how to' pocket size
piece of wonder or just a bloody good yarn. After all if you're going
to write with the idea of strangers reading your work, then it has to
either teach them something, make them laugh, cry or put them into
shock with revelations that you think nobody has ever thought of
since the first word was chipped into a stone.
Just how do you get
started? "A great American humorous writer, Stephen Leacock, was
once asked whether writing was a difficult art. 'Oh, no, he replied,
writing isn't difficult at all. You just take a pen and put down
whatever occurs to you, of course,' he added thoughtfully, 'the
occurring, now that can be difficult." Schoenheimer p3.
After much deliberation
you put something down on paper and you think, that's not bad, I
might run that past someone. Family and friends gush all over you
expressing how wonderful you are and even if your work is appalling
you are heavily encouraged to write a novel. And because of that
encouragement you actually think this is a possibility. You begin
work without delay on THE NOVEL; the theme of which you feel has to
be dramatic and complicated. Maybe a psychopathic degenerate with no
morals can be at the core of your gruesome tale. You throw in the odd
line of dialogue so people will be under the impression that you know
what you are doing and before you can say, 'oops dropped my pen'
you've written ninety pages of surreal narrative, which you believe
will knock people's socks off.
With sudden lack of
genius your brain won't function, not another gory thought comes to
your overworked mind. You decide to have a break for a few days; six
months later all thoughts of THE NOVEL are forgotten.
The next time you feel
the urge to be creative you try your hand at poetry. Little rhyming
ditties roll forth on the page and you truly believe you have found
your forte in the wonderful world of writing. Six months later with
several large drawers full of poems that nobody wants and your head
turning all your thoughts into a rhythmic pattern of witticisms; a
straight jacket is the obvious next step.
You need an idea or at
least a reader grabbing first line. "Just as a film director
with his camera-men can be all powerful, making us see what he sees,
so you, when you pick up your pen may take shots for your reader to
see; but first you must find something that you really like looking
at. For instance, on a blazing midsummer day a cool looking spot is a
welcome sight." Southwell p1.
You realize that if
ever passion and talent are to be turned into a marketable product
then immediate assistance is vital.
Learning becomes
important and necessary; time to do a course. You are put to the test
– and how! You find that your skills are not as good as you first
imagined and you become aware of your inept knowledge of the subject
and the importance of getting it right.
"Thirty-nine
rewrites are several more than most writers will want or be fully
able to attempt, but you should count on revising your work up to
half a dozen times before you consider it finished." Appelbaum
& Evans p16.
A solid training
regime, although sometimes difficult, opens up many possibilities.
Sweating bullets you do
your utmost to impress, handing in assignments on time all the while
thinking, it's a walk in the park. Until through the correction
process you are told that some areas of your grammar skills are
incompetent. This causes feelings of inadequacy and you work harder
to meet the tutor's expectations wondering if they will ever see your
brilliance shining through the rubble. Finally you seem to be doing
better; and in fact you are. Words are being strung together and the
sentences are logical. Fiction is a low point for you however and
once again you trudge down the familiar road of doubt. The learning
process becomes a huge challenge, but you're in there fighting.
Your latest assignment
is returned and you have earned yourself a merit. You are humbled to
the core and that low confidence gets a much-needed lift, but mostly
you have a strong feeling of hope. Someone did like your work…someone
you don't know personally…someone who is not worried about
upsetting your delicate ego. This is exactly what you needed but you
also realize that there are a lot of cracks in this pavement so you
set about filling them in by tackling them one at a time. The longer
you study, astutely reading other people's work, the better your own
work becomes. "You will not get far if you 'skim' as many people
do, through an article in a newspaper or illustrated periodical. Give
it all the attention you can muster; from the first word to the
last." Foers E. & Jones J. p15.
In addition to your
formal studies you read all you can about writing and indeed writers.
Reference books such as 'This Business of Writing' by Raymond Flower
become as important to you as your dictionary. You research and plan
meticulously gathering useful information; stockpiling is very
necessary.
You discover that
fiction comes easier to mind when it is colored here and there with a
generous helping of fact. To paraphrase Tennessee Williams (Flower p.
7) 'A Streetcar Named Desire' was inspired by his sister's true-life
experience of a lost love, which eventually drove her into mental
decline.' This is the kind of fact that makes the transition to
fiction a little easier. When you have written all you can, keep
writing and eventually you will see a style emerge that is
unmistakably YOU.
References:
Applebaum J.&
Evans N. 1978, How To Get Happily Published, Ed. Harper &
Row, N.Y.
Flower R. 1987, This
Business of Writing, Landmark Books Pty. Ltd. Singapore.
Foers E. &
Jones J. 1955, Comprehension and Precis, Ed. Oxford University Press,
London.
Schoenheimer, Henry,
P.1963, Expressive English, Ed. Cheshire Publishing.
Southwell, E.A. 1951,
Working With Words, Book1, Ed.Longmans Green and Co
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