So, I’ve joined a writers group. It was by accident really;
I just thought I was going to lunch with a new literary friend, but now find I
am signed up for monthly critiques and in depth analysis of my work. Apparently
it’s not all about drinking copious quantities of wine and gossiping- that’s a
bookclub. Darn.
I have my reservations about all of this- and it’s nothing to
do with the people. They are wonderful and talented and generous with ideas. It’s
me. I haven’t written anything approaching a body of work since...oh... my last
novel, Glory, which was published in 2009; I wrote it in 2007. That’s basically,
well you do the math, subtraction was never my strong point- I only add stuff
to my life. Which I have done cheerfully for the last few years; Wearable Art,
working on TV and in the film industry, illustrating, running workshops...but
add another word to my novel(s). Well that’s a bit of a problem.
I had a long discussion about this with Brian Falkner and
Kyle Mewburn at the recent Bloom Family Festival where we were contracted to
tell stories and run workshops. It was a very happy weekend with fellow
writers, artists and of course our audiences. I shared accommodation with the
boys and was most impressed to see Brian tapping away at his Macbook each
morning before we forayed out to the festival. He was finishing his next work;
I was just trying to wake up and smell the coffee.
‘Why?’ I said, ‘can’t I just finish my sodding novel?’
‘Do you like what you are writing?’ they said.
‘Yes- I think it has legs and backbones to boot.’
‘So how did you write the other ones?’ they asked.
‘I just sat down and wrote them.’
And I did- Verity’s Truth was for a competition with a
deadline. Janie Olive was as a distraction from the thesis script I was writing
whilst doing my MA at the IIML, and Glory just because I could and had
something to say out loud about not winning prizes. None of them took me that
long and I had so much fun bashing away with two fingers at my keyboard, delighting
myself with words and fitting all the parts of the plot puzzle together.
‘So what’s different with this one?’ they said.
‘I’ve shown it to people before it’s done.’
‘Ah,’ said Brian, ‘in the words of Stephen King, in his book On Writing, you’ve let the steam out.’
And that is exactly what I’ve done. I’ve committed the
cardinal sin of showing too many people the WIP and asking for their opinions.
And they, being wonderful and generous and knowledgeable, have given them.
Shit- what an idiot! I now have not one, but two unfinished first drafts with
lots of conflicting sticky notes and pencilled comments. And I know better than
that. Really.
In all my other work practice- making wearable art,
illustrating a book, designing a workshop, making crafts for TV...I NEVER show
my rough ideas to others for comment. There are two reasons for this:
The first is that they
might not understand what I’m trying to do before the problem solving is done
and give unwanted advice from their perspective on how it should go. For
instance, if I’m trying to make a piece of wearable art that says something
about, oh let’s say... Arthritis (I’m not by the way), then I may have a real
life experience of it that is different from another person’s. The thing I want
to impart about it and the expression of that view (down to the materials and
method used to make the artwork) will be different in my cerebral cortex than
any other artist’s. If I ask for advice
on an unfinished plan, I’ll get helpful suggestions on what to show, what to
say and what technique to employ- from SOMEONE ELSE’s experience. That’s no
good to me at all- it will confuse me and make me doubt my conviction. This is
very different from asking someone how to do resin casting so I can make the
bone centrepiece that I’ve designed (and I haven’t ...once again, this is not a
real piece I am making. This year I’m doing a Bizarre Bra which has nothing to do
with aching limbs- aching fingers whilst I make it perhaps...). I only need structural help when I’ve made the creative plan.
This is what an editor will do for a manuscript ... are you reading this Penny?
(my beloved Scholastic editor).
The second reason for not showing your undies before you’ve
got dressed so to speak, is that you lose the excitement of knowing you have
something that is only known to you. It’s your sly secret; your guilty
pleasure, an affair with a whole world and bunch of characters that only YOU
know about. It’s your illicit lover, to which you’ll go back late at night when
everyone is asleep and you’ll play with each other and dream impossible things
that ordinary life doesn’t allow. You won’t leave it alone until the passion
has run its course; the first draft at least will be finished.
And as Brian said whilst his fingers stroked the
keyboard, a naughty smile on his face (yes I was watching Brian!), I’ve let the
steam out. The passion and the thrill has gone and I don’t know how to get it
back... I’m stuck with the predictability of everyday life whilst my writing muse
is off shagging someone else’s brain and making them uber productive and on the
way to writerly fame (Kyle Mewburn, that will be you). Apologies for the overly
sexual nature of these analogies, but without passion all art is merely inoffensive
wallpaper- and I DO have a bodice ripper I’m working on as well as a YA.
So, at our writer’s group meeting, we said what we’d like
help with and what we would share and how long critiques would be etc etc. I
declared that I would NOT be sharing anything and didn’t want critiques (the
ones we had at the IIML nearly scarred me for life). But I DID want the group
to hold me to account regarding finishing the YA at least. I gave them full
permission to beat me with my own pages if I have not progressed from one
meeting to the next. They cheerfully agreed.
Holy moley, I’d better start writing, or the next time you
see me I’ll be covered in paper cuts.