Wednesday, December 28, 2005

Less Smut


Because I embarrassed myself in the last post, I will try to un-embarrass myself now by writing about something other than nude photography, mucous-filled head colds, and Clurg farts.

I don't like Poets&Writers anymore, but I was reading a recent issue today and stumbled across an article called "Talking it to Death", about writers who spoke often and at length about book projects that were basically unfinishable, thereby forcing themselves to work on books that they couldn't write until they all died.

The article implied that the act of talking about the books was what had drained the creativity from the projects; too much talk, not enough action to back it up. This worried me, because I always talk about my writing projects. (Because really, what else is there to talk about. Don't answer that, it was rhetorical.)

I had this great idea last week. I had just read a biography of Shirley Jackson, and I was riding home on my bike thinking about it, and it hit me. Two years ago I wrote this novel that's hard to describe. There's a girl who's writing a book about a wunderkind writer who died fifty years ago, only as she's writing she starts to unintentionally novelize it, even unto changing the ending so that the writer lives instead of dying. What if I took out the whole girl-writing-the-book story, and just wrote it as a biography, only letting the novelizations slip in here and there, in footnotes, forwards, the occasional dramatized scene. A transparent biography, through which one can see the also fictional author putting things in the order that suits her own needs best.

Now that I've written about it, have I cursed myself? Is this why I have only finished three separate 150-plus page versions of my new novel which I love like a baby, only to have to start all over again, because I told someone about it?

Poets&Writers always makes me paranoid. Oh my god, I have to get an MFA. No one will love me without a terminal degree. John Updike doesn't do anything the way I do, I must be utterly worthless. Someone else got their first novel published, and it tanked! Now they have to write under a pseudonym! Maybe if they could lay off the practical advice and just focus on interviews with good writers, it would be okay. Because the act of writing is intensely personal and everyone goes about every part of it differently, because the world of publishing is perhaps best left unexplored, because really, shouldn't writers stick to making art, just for the sake of it, because if they don't they run the risk of letting business dictate the type of writing they will do.

I will talk my novels to death, and they will rise from their graves, maybe a little rotten and gooey, but still mine.

Comments:
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What's your novel about? How do the versions differ? What else are you supposed to talk about?
 
The new novel is about a woman who turns black. It features several fairy-tale bit-part players, e.g. a witch, one of twelve dancing sisters, and a werewolf. It started as a comment on the new trend of 'chick lit', like, how would a typical American woman react to finding that she had changed colors; would she carry on as usual, looking for love and a fulfilling career? Then it veered more into fairy-tale land with a traveling circus, and now the protagonist is a painter, an Artist in Residence to a small southern town's Art Guild, and there's some religious significance as well (she's doing a series of iconographic paintings of saints placing them in modern contexts)
 
Oh wait. I remember that -- you published an excerpt here, didn't you? That was good. I'll have to go back and look at it again. What will you do with it?
 
That's the version I'm keeping. My plan is to do basically what I did with my poetry chapbook, putting two chapters at a time together into little books with some illustration, and sell them through Parcell Press or just on this blog, maybe. It's taking me a really long time to write even the first two chapters, though, so who knows when all this will actually occur. Please do read the first chapter, here at The March Hare, and leave your comments.
 
Excuse me. Does anyone want to buy our backlog of 500,000 meaningless words?

Sincerely,

The Good People at Blogagaard
 
I bid twenty pesos.
 
Oh time thy pyramids.
 
I don't know what that means, perhaps because I just drank a Coors Light really fast out in the slightly chilly, moist air of Mobile. It sounds pretty smart.
 
I'd guess there's a 50% chance Clurg knows where that came from, and, yes it is smart, and yes it is actually on topic. I don't know what the odds are that you would recall it sober -- it's not exactly obscure, but why would anyone remember it?

Have you noticed that this whirlwind of posting by you and David and me is getting progressively more -- not "mean," or "rude" -- cavalier? I hope we will still be friends in the morning. Not that I will stop just yet.
 
All I know is, I'm glad someone else in this crazy world doesn't feel like going to bed at a reasonable time. Your comments still sound fairly sane, but ole Op and I... well, we've had a couple.
 
Yup, sober. It's a character flaw, really. I relish the contact buzz.
 
I'm what you would call a 'cheap date'. That's both a good and a bad thing, depending on how you look at it. And who you are.

Look, I was being so good, discussing my important creative work, and now I'm embarrassing myself again by being drunk and online. Crap.
 
Say, it Googles. I cannot recommend taking it on tipsy. I'm pretty sure it isn't that interesting.
 
Kelly, without any textbook/on-line reference whatever, I will guess at the pyramid quip you made earlier. I am guessing it means even the pyramids will eventually disolve, and that everything is meaningless, or, if you will, dust in the wind. So of course my 500,000 words are also meaningless.

Where did my whiskey bottle go?
 
Right conclusion, wrong method. Not bad, half credit.
 
I'm going to sleep now and I'm going to dream about being naked and drunk in a pyramid, and it will be your fault. I'll tell you about it in the morning.
 
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