Given the way of the world young people do best not to
aspire to become writers. It is fine if you must, but otherwise, try something
else.
So says Mark Helprin in an engaging, well-written column in
the Wall Street Journal.
Aspiring writers often believe that writing is about
expressing their brilliant ideas. Once they have that flash of inspiration,
they tell themselves, the words will flow.
Most of them are still waiting for the inspiration. Putting
ideas first will guarantee you a lot of blank pages.
Writing is a process. Ideas come to you while you are
engaged in the process. If you know what you are going to say before your start
writing and if the idea has not changed as you are writing, then you are doing
it wrong.
Helprin does young and not-so-young writers a great service
by focusing, not on the idea, but on the mechanics, the process of writing. Writing is work; it is hard work. Anyone who tells you otherwise is lying to
you.
One of the reasons it’s so hard is that it’s a private activity.
You do not write in a group. You do not tell the world you are a writer by
whipping out your notepad in a café and making a conspicuous show of looking
like a writer.
Your writing must be able to speak for itself; at some point it will have
to stand on its own.
In Helprin’s words:
Never
write in a café, especially in Europe. Ever since Hemingway, this has been the
literary equivalent of what in mountain climbing is called the "tech
weenie" (that is, someone who cannot get a foot off the ground but is
weighed down with $10,000's worth of equipment). Literary skill, much less
greatness, cannot be had with a pose, and exhibitionism extorts the price of
failure.
Writers care enormously about process. They care about their
writing instruments, the kind of paper they use, the number of revisions they
do.
Helprin suggests that it doesn’t matter what you write on,
but I suspect, as does he, that writing by hand is superior to writing on
a mechanical device.
It’s slower and more thoughtful. It lets your sentences
breathe. It lets them be what they want to be, not what you want to make them be.
All writers know that if you write on a computer you are
more likely to fill your sentences with excessive verbiage. When writers
started writing on word processing programs it was not very difficult to tell
which writers had used Microsoft Word and which ones had used pen and ink.
He writes:
Whether
you use a pencil, a pen, an old typewriter or something electrical is largely
irrelevant to the result, although there is magic in writing by hand. It's not
just that it has been that way for 5,000 years or more, and has engraved upon
our expectations of literature the effects associated with the pen—the pauses;
considerations; sometimes the racing; the scratching out; the transportation of
words and phrases with arrows, lines and circles; the closeness of the eyes to
the page; the very touching of the page—but that the pen, not being a machine
(it does not meet the scientific definition of a machine), is a surrender to a
different power than those of mere speed and efficiency.
Good writers take pride in a page that is covered with
excisions and revisions. But it is also a good idea to rewrite from scratch.
Cutting and pasting do not make your writing read like a
verbal collage. They make it sound incoherent.
Next, there’s the paper. Helprin seems to believe that it
doesn’t matter what kind of paper you use:
There
are beautiful, smooth, heavy papers, but great works have been written on
ration cards, legal pads and the kind of cheap paper they sell in developing
countries—grayish white, almost furry, with flecks of brown and black that
probably came from lizards and bats that jumped into the paper makers' vats.
Most writers prefer yellow legal pads. They are obviously
scrap paper, so a draft written on lined yellow sheets feels impermanent. It invites revision.
Legal pads are also superior because they are yellow. Their
special coloring prevents them from reflecting glare up into your eyes. If you want
to follow Helprin’s advice and focus intently on your writing, glare is not
your friend.
Also, if you are going to be revising extensively, it’s a
good idea to write your drafts on every other line. The empty lines invite editing.
Helprin recommends multiple drafts, and that means a dozen
or more. Journalists and bloggers often publish second or third drafts, but,
for a more important production, it is better to go through at least a dozen
drafts.
Any good editor will tell you that the key to the writing
process is your ability to rewrite and edit your drafts. A good writer can read
a draft as though it had been written by someone else.
If you get your ego involved in the process, fall in love with the
rhythm of your prose or wallow in the good feeling you had when you were first
drafting, your writing will suffer.
After finishing a draft, a good writer will put it aside for
a time and then come back to it. If he does not feel somewhat sick to his
stomach when he re-reads it he is doing it wrong.
If you cannot stand reading your dreadful early drafts you
are not cut out for writing.
If you are really, really convinced that you have gotten
it right, and want to test it, try reading it out loud. Don’t burden your
friends and family. Read it out loud to yourself and see how much you still
love it.
1 comment:
Your attachment to paper over word processor contradicts your attachment to modern agriculture over organic.
I suspect it's largely a sentimental difference.
And, yes, I've read the articles that say writing with a pen affects your brain differently but speaking from personal experience the computer is fine. And writing at Starbucks is good too.
After a while people notice you and wonder what you're doing but no one is impressed. So there is no romance in it at all.
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