tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4074861.post4918554795444050823..comments2024-03-09T11:10:46.978-05:00Comments on Brooklyn Arden: I have a mad writer crush on Zadie SmithCherylhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05972029478350879112noreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4074861.post-16162387268022332302007-01-17T23:08:00.000-05:002007-01-17T23:08:00.000-05:00I have a writer crush on her too.I have a writer crush on her too.lisa greenwaldhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07372977214409210040noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4074861.post-19524608656023995842007-01-17T18:43:00.000-05:002007-01-17T18:43:00.000-05:00Yay! Brain food! Lovely stuff!
Here are my favori...Yay! Brain food! Lovely stuff!<br /><br />Here are my favorite bits…<br /><br />“What unites great novels is the individual manner in which they articulate experience and force us to be attentive, waking us from the sleepwalk of our lives.” <br /><br />“For writers have only one duty, as I see it: the duty to express accurately their way of being in the world.”<br /><br />The part about clichés and “rummaging through the purse” cracked me up too.<br /><br />Thanks Cheryl! (And for extra bonus points tie this into picture books and how a good one changes or expands a child’s view of the world in a new way. I would guess that it would be in a smaller more intimate way, up close and simple.)<br /><br />Now my mind is flipping through all the books I’ve read and which ones changed the way I looked at the world. Hmmm… <br /><br />Best thoughts,<br /><br />Marilyn.Thetoymakershttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15405265800595978197noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4074861.post-63248672466575373222007-01-17T14:35:00.000-05:002007-01-17T14:35:00.000-05:00Cheryl,
You asked an excellent question on your bl...Cheryl,<br />You asked an excellent question on your blog a week ago. What would I do with 45 minutes to spare? The discussion took an interesting, if heated, turn but no one really answered your question and that’s a shame because it really struck a chord with me. As I writer it happens to me all the time.<br /><br />Here’s what I do when my 4 children are due on the school bus in 45 minutes. Ideally, I’d have the whole school day to write, but I went to my critique group this morning for 2 hours; a thing I never miss. I skipped lunch and went straight to the freelance teaching job I have once a week to make ends meet at home. (I gave up my teaching career 10 years ago to focus on writing.) So now the bus is on the way, shall I:<br />a) clean up my appallingly messy house<br />b) take a shower<br />c) work on the work-for-hire story for the curriculum publisher – it’s due in a week and they will pay me cash money a week after I turn it in.<br />d) write a quick back-to-school article I know I can sell in half a dozen parenting magazines in the next month or so. Not great pay, but reliable.<br />e)revise for the 10th time the almost-but-not-quite-right picture book<br />f) revise my lesson plan for the teaching job because I know I can do better for my students if I tweek the assignment a bit.<br />g) research this cool new idea I have about a novel with sailing and political intrigue.<br />h) work on the chapter my group critiqued that needs a TON of work<br />i) make brownies<br />j) call my sister.<br />k) get the mail<br />l) check my email and browse my favorite blogs<br />m) balance my checkbook<br /><br />So here’s what I did:<br />1) threw in a load of laundry (the eternal task in a household of 6) 2 min.<br />2) put together a casserole, popped it in the oven on time delayed bake. (a lifesaving feature) 15 min.<br />3)put my computer and the notes from my morning critique by the door with my kids’ dance bags and set out a snack. 1 min<br />4) check the mail and email only, no blogs. 5 minutes<br />5) nap. 22 minutes<br /><br />Why the nap, I hear you cry.<br /> Because I’m so tired I can't see straight, and I have to drive my kids to dance right after school. Also, I will have 3 hours at the dance studio to digest my critique and revise my chapter. It’s loud, and I’ll have to check homework, and hand out band aids from time to time, but I can work there. I’ve done it twice a week for years. The work goes fairly well and I get a hunch about how I can fix the problem in my chapter, so I add a few disjointed notes, gather up my dancers, and head home.<br /><br />Dinner is done, so the shower, eat, chat, check homework, hug and get the younger kids in bed, phase of the evening goes pretty smoothly. My wonderful husband cleans up the kitchen, and my teenagers finish the laundry, so I can get back to work by 9:30 or so. I put in an hour and a half on the curriculum job because those guys are going to pay me, and I have a deadline. <br /><br />But that problem in my chapter is still bugging me, so I switch off the evening news and take another swing at it. A page and a half later the writing is still crappy but the problem with my character is fixed. I’ll clean up the prose another day. What’s left? A shower at last!<br /><br />Yes it’s after midnight, but don’t you dare feel sorry for me. I chose to be a writer and I’m incredibly lucky to have a busy family life. It took me forever to break in just like everyone else, but I’m happy to say I just sold my first novel this year to an editor who gave me polite rejections for years on stories that I was sure would be perfect for him and his publishing house. But he said try again, so I started over and wrote something better.<br /><br />Okay, I admit that I pouted over those rejections, but then I realized that if I’m going to be a career writer, I’m going to have to start over and write something better every year anyway, so I might as well start practicing now.<br /><br />So there it is, an exceedingly long-winded answer to what this writer does with her spare 45 minutes.<br /><br />Thanks for sharing your working day with us. I hope this is as helpful to you as your post was to me.<br /> <br />RosanneAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4074861.post-11636332399160641562007-01-16T11:55:00.000-05:002007-01-16T11:55:00.000-05:00This is a timely post. Last night I finished readi...This is a timely post. Last night I finished reading ON BEAUTY. I am utterly, hopelessly in love with Zadie Smith. <br /><br />May I challenge you to a duel?<br /><br />Leslie MuirAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com