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The Writing Life

Vita Sackville West Sissinghurst

Although I’ve been pursuing the writing life for a number of years, I worry about calling myself a writer in the absence of much in the way of published works. The term “emerging writer” is sometimes used for those in my situation, although I hate that description, implying as it does a chrysalis to butterfly or egg to chicken metamorphosis, a neither in nor out state. Over the long term this smacks of suspended animation to the point of distinct discomfort. So perhaps I’ll go back in to re-emerge another time. 

All that aside, I’ve naturally been fascinated to read about other writers’ experiences, ideas and reflections on writing over the years. Not to seek inspiration so much as a kind of comfort. Writers, no matter their age, skill level or experience, have much in common and discovering how others struggle with the same fears, doubts and creative impasses as I do, is reassuring.

These days, with the encyclopedic resources of the internet, it’s possible to find out all kinds of things about writers, famous and otherwise, from their favourite toast topping to the names and idiosyncrasies of their dogs, cats, children or spouses. Interviewers are especially curious about their daily routines**, how much they write a day, at what time and in what place (photographs of the author reclining at their desk amid books, papers, framed awards, covetable collectibles, dogs etc. tend to accompany such articles). As a bit of a voyeur when it comes to other people’s rooms, especially those where great things have been created, I love these photos. In special tribute to writers’ dogs who sit at the feet of genius, there’s a gallery of some at the end, taken from LitHub’s gorgeous article “12 Famous Authors at Work With Their Dogs“.

The feature image of this post comes from the website ati.com (All That’s Interesting) and shows the writing room of Vita Sackville-West famous for many things besides writing, including being the lover of Virginia Woolf, the inspiration for Woolf’s book “Orlando“, and the creator of the exquisite garden at Sissinghurst Castle in Kent, where I spent a wondrous afternoon some years ago on a visit to the UK. Sackville-West’s writing room was located at the top of the Elizabethan Tower in the grounds. Despite my loathing of climbing stairs, up the narrow spiral staircase I trudged, to find it immaculately preserved and redolent still with the sense of her presence.

(I’ve scattered a few more author’s den photos through this post in the hope readers find them as fascinating as I do.)

What started me thinking again recently about other writers’ experiences was the book “How to Get There” written by Maggie Mackellar. the second of her trilogy of memoirs, following “When It Rains“. The third,”Graft“, is due for release on 25 April. 

Maggie is one of those gifted writers whose prose seamlessly runs the gamut from grappling with sheep to the quiet contemplation of a small precious moment to the anguish and joy of the human heart, and if you haven’t read her books, I think you should.

Following the loss of both her husband and mother in close succession, Mackellar, after struggling to re-establish a precarious hold on normal existence, took a courageous gamble and moved with her two young children to Tasmania to begin a new relationship. That this involved reinventing herself as a sheep farmer was just another small mountain she set herself to scale. Against this background of monumental life changes (just a couple of which would rate as dangerously stressful on the Social Readjustment Rating Scale) she set out to turn an embryo draft into a novel. A work of historical fiction inspired by Miles Franklin, for which she’d already received a publisher’s advance, it had at that stage been several years in the making.

And it was what she shared about this endeavour that spoke eloquently to my own struggles with a recalcitrant novel. (She’s also described it in a 2017 essay published in Sydney Review of Books called “Going to the Silences“.) She’s kindly allowed me to quote her in the section below.

Dylan Thomas Writing Shed
Dylan Thomas’s Writing Shed in Wales (from https://thespaces.com/writers-homes-you-can-visit/)

Reading of her experiences reminded me of the tough grind that novel writing can be. It’s made up of multiple challenges on two different levels – the micro and the macro. The micro is the moment-to-moment face off with the blinking cursor, the white space, the blank page, the nothingness that waits for you to fill it. Whereas the macro is partly hidden. It’s the feral leviathan lurking beyond the immediacy of the page, behind the screen, outside the window or at the other end of an email or phone call, the big picture concept that lured you into this foolishness in the first place. Best kept well in the background for as long as possible. But every now and then it squirms out, baring its yellow teeth in maniacal laughter that you could have been so deluded as to think you’d bring it to ground. (If the leviathan happens to be called “historical fiction” as Mackellar’s is and mine was, the hazards expand exponentially.)

Maggie Mackellar on Writing

... years of painstakingly staking a sentence to the page and calling it a day’s work ... Then I look back at the page, at the scrawling notes I’ve taken, the few sentences I’ve eked out over the past few hours, and a sense of the impossible quietly drapes itself across my shoulders.

I committed to a month of hard writing. I stopped the obsessive research. After all, it was a novel, not a biography. I put all my notes aside and started my early-morning writing regime again. I was determined to have a draft of something to take with me to Tasmania in the New Year. I wrote – two thousand words a day. After a month I had a hundred pages. It was something, but it was not a novel.

I was filling my notebook with scene ideas, small character sketches and notes and notes.It was a notebook not, in the end, devoted to the novel, as I’d planned, but rather evidence of time spent not writing the novel.

After the memoir came out I returned to Miles but after much work I’ve put that manuscript back in a drawer with a lock on it and I won’t look at it again for a long time. I mourned for a little while, because, despite some good bits, there is something not quite right about it. It’s not ready, or perhaps more accurately I’m not ready to finish writing it. So, I tell myself to trust my judgment and let it be. But I’ve also asked myself, why can’t I write it?

Fast forward to this time last year and you would have found me sitting in front of my computer muttering like Sybylla as I circled the mess of a manuscript. ‘Weariness! Weariness!’ Miles had bled me dry. I dreaded the work, the words I eked out were mostly lifeless. The plot plodded. It was the worst sort of writing, earnest, try hard, clever … false – it was neither fiction nor history. It was just boring.

Trouble was, every time I attempted to flesh out Miles my words were wooden. ... The problem was me. I lacked the skills to write Miles out of the silences I’d found in her archive. Every time I wrote from Miles’ perspective I would run smack-bang into my historian self and have to down tools and reconsider the story that was emerging.

And then I pulled Miles out of the drawer – again. I found the fresh scenes, worked on them. Recast the story so it was tighter, a shorter time frame. But still it didn’t work. It was earnest. Oh so earnest. And writerly, and even as I worked at it I could feel the deadness of my prose.

Of course, months later when I take out the mass of words and search for patterns, I can’t see anything except the view out of my new study.

Rudyard Kipling's study
Rudyard Kipling’s study, East Sussex (from https://www.countryandtownhouse.com)

 

Jean Hanff Korelitz on Writing

Another writer I admire, Jean Hanff Korelitz (whose latest book “The Latecomer” I reviewed here), said the following:

Sometimes our great ideas hammer away at us for years before they break through. And sometimes they just float into our heads and take a chair. And sometimes our great ideas…aren’t even ours ... [and sometimes] a casual suggestion hits you like a ton of bricks and you think: Wow! Good idea!

I know from my own writing that every set-in-stone word is the result of a discovery, a negotiation, a reconsideration, perhaps even a rejection before it makes its way to black-on-white permanence inside the finished copy of a book we read.

The writing process ... invites our private self-doubts and anxieties to work alongside our imaginations, research skills, and even—especially!—the telling of our personal stories, but—as if in compensation for that—it also opens up some mystical pathway inside us, making all manner of revelation possible. That’s part of why the process is so mysterious, even to ourselves.

Julian Barnes writing room
Julian Barnes in his writing room (from the New York Times article “A Writer’s Room”)

 

Frederick Douglass writing room
Frederick Douglass's writing room (taken from Frommer's article "Writers in Residence: How to Visit Where Great American Writers Lived & Worked"

E.M. Forster on Writing

E.M. Forster famously said many things on writing and wrote a book about it (“Aspects of the Novel“). Here are just a few of his bon mots (taken from The Paris Review Interviews, First Series) – the first of which I suspect is deliberately provocative!

 

“I have always found writing pleasant and don’t understand what people mean by ‘throes of creation’.

But I had not settled what is going to happen, and that is why the novel remains a fragment. The novelist should, I think, always settle when he starts what is going to happen, what his major event is to be.

Of course, that wonderful thing, a character running away with you—which happens to everyone—that’s happened to me, I’m afraid. Characters run away with you, and so won't fit on to what is coming.

On being asked if he could say anything about the process of turning a real person into a fictional one: A useful trick is to look back upon such a person with half-closed eyes, fully describing certain characteristics. I am left with about two-thirds of a human being and can get to work.

Ernest Hemingway's study
Ernest Hemingway’s Studio, Key West (from The Florida Keys & Key West “Keys Voices”)

 

 

Diana Athill on Writing

Diana Athill, whose delightful book “Somewhere Towards the End” I’ve recently read, had this to say about the difficulties of writing peculiar to those of us of a certain age.

 

 

Much as I wanted to continue to write, I found it impossible unless something was itching to come out. I could cover paper easily in ordinary ways such as letters, blurbs, reviews of books and so on, but if I tried to tell a story or examine a subject because that was what, intellectually, I wanted to do, not because there was pressure inside me to do it, the writing would be inert. With persistence, I could go on covering paper, but plod plod plod it would go until I was bored out of my mind

Jonathan Lethem writing room
Jonathan Lethem’s writing room (from The New York Times article “A Writer’s Room”)

 

Gertrude Stein on Writing

Perhaps the inimitable Gertrude Stein should have the last word, as she always liked to do in life.

It takes a heap of loafing to write a book.

Don’t write about what you don’t know even if you don’t know it

If you write a half hour a day it makes a lot of writing year by year.

**Just as I was writing this, I read this interview with Alice Nelson, whose book “Faithless” I’ve been reading, and had to share it with you. Not so much to mock Alice Nelson, but as an example of the way journalists like to paint a rose coloured image of a reality that is, more often than not, dun coloured.

“I live in the Luberon mountains in the south of France and I go walking in the countryside early every morning. As I wend my way home through the cherry orchards I find myself turning thoughts over in my mind and dreaming up sentences for whatever it is I’m working on, and hurry back to my desk.” 

What does one say? I go walking in the suburban streets early every morning with my dog, Toby. As I wend my way home through the wheelie bins, I find myself having a thought about a sentence when Toby suddenly stops to succumb to a call of nature and I’m forced to fossick for a poo bag, prise it open, bend my arthritic knees towards the deposit and struggle to scrape it up without falling on my face into it. By the time I get back to my desk, all thoughts about sentences have gone. 

Famous Writers with their Dogs

 

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Angie
Angie
1 year ago

Another great article, Anne, that captures the agony and the ecstasy of the writing life. Those last few paragraphs made me laugh out loud. 😆

Sue Berry
Sue Berry
1 year ago

Oh those gorgeous pictures of ‘writing rooms’, I can’t decide which one I want my room to look like, each one has such a fabulous mood, I love them all.

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Anne Green

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