TheBanyanTree: On Writing
Indiglow
indiglow at sbcglobal.net
Tue Jun 14 18:43:30 PDT 2011
I understand that feeling... usually for me it is a poem, and when I say "I'm in writing mode" hubby knows he'd better make friends with the microwave if he wants to eat. So, these novels you've peopled... can I find them somewhere and read them???? I love what you write and I'm hungry, hungry, hungry for your words...
Jana
--- On Tue, 6/14/11, NancyIee at aol.com <NancyIee at aol.com> wrote:
From: NancyIee at aol.com <NancyIee at aol.com>
Subject: Re: TheBanyanTree: On Writing
To: thebanyantree at lists.remsset.com
Date: Tuesday, June 14, 2011, 3:10 PM
In a message dated 6/14/2011 4:21:03 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
monique.colver at gmail.com writes:
"You have to wait
>> for
>> inspiration, you can't make it happen, it has to come organically." He
was
>> on speaker phone so I heard it all, and when my husband got off the
phone
>> I
>> said, "Yeah, you can wait for inspiration to strike, if you're a
hobbyist
>> and don't care if you never write."
Hobby. . . .UNLESS. Unless you are obsessed about the
subject/characters/story you are penning.
Writing to me is like a haven from the everyday, a place I go to "visit"
people I really like, and who like me, or don't, but "visiting" them is like
going home to a fascinating if disfunctional family. Writing, to me, is
about revealing, the moods, actions, lives of people no one in the world know
but me. Do I feel godlike that I created them? No. Rather, I am their
slave-servant, reporting what they say and do. Some characters are
persistent, haunting me until I sit down and fill them out, and then release them to
do as they will within the premise and plot.
Outline? I never outline. I am inspired by a situation or premise or era,
and then bring forth a cast of characters from the black hole of my
imagination, to populate and solve or destroy themselves in the context of the
story. I never know how my novels will end, until . it ends. Will the guy get
the girl, will the murder be solved, will good win out over evil? No
outline. No formula. I merely take the characters that have been most persistent
in haunting me, and set them into the muddle and turn them loose.
But, once starting, I cannot stop writing until the end, even if it means
pulling all-nighters, ducking out of social gatherings, putting off other
duties. No drug is as powerful or compelling as a cast of characters with a
plot to chew on, when they are on fire. Heroin is not a hobby. Writing
is not a hobby. It flows and flows, and nothing will stop it but to sit
down and follow it along.
Thus was born my first novel . .thus was born the one on which I now work.
And, I must go now . .they beckon . . . . . .
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