Archive for the ‘busy’ Category

Work

Monday, September 13th, 2010

Work is important. The quiet, painstaking pointlessness of putting words in rows and hearing the printer make its back and forth noise.

Work is writing the second chapter, researching the words for the parts of dogs (withers!) scrutinising copy-edits, putting receipts in order, feeding, winding, scrubbing white baby-vomit off the arm of the couch, planning workshops, ordering books, reading books, sharpening pencils, finding out about laptop warranty, the school run, loading and unloading and loading and unloading the washing machine, wiping spatters of grease from the tiles behind the cooker, sweeping up cat-fluff from the midnight fights, buying mushrooms, putting diesel in the car, reading about Salt Lake City, re-reading Moby Dick, preparing a work outline for a new mentee, staring at the muck the rain leaves on the windows and waiting.

Cupboards. Skeletons. Etc.

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

I read this post by Diane Becker a few days ago, and it struck a chord with me – having recently had a fairly horrible stay in hospital myself. (There aren’t any nice stays in hospital, are there? Or should I save up for BUPA?) I don’t go into things like that in my blog, or too much in real life either, and I never thought about how that linked to my writing method until I started reflecting on Diane’s post and the way she chooses not to talk about things and how she feels that affects her writing.

I hope my writing isn’t formulaic, but there’s a knack to working out a good first person narrative – deciding what the person thinks they are telling you, and what they are actually telling you. What they don’t want to say, and what seeps in around the edges anyway. What they don’t want to talk about might be near death experiences or trauma. It is just as likely (in my stories, anyway) to be secret humiliations, sins of omission and social failures. How does it seep around the edges? How do you show what they don’t want to tell?

There are a couple of things in my life that I’ve very deliberately decided I will neither think nor talk nor write about. It is like editing a novel (everything feels like editing a novel right now, though) and cutting out the bits you don’t like and rearranging the rest to cover the gaps. It’s very important and makes the rest of the whole wobbling edifice possible. Not amnesia. Editing.

Perhaps you will find some of this deleted material seeping in around the edges – in jokes, dreams and stories I make up – but not, I think, if I am vigilant. Not if I am really good at what I try to do. But if I can spot the way the truth seeps in around the edges and replicate it for my pretend narrators, I should be able to get a handle on it in real life, shouldn’t I?

It is lazy thinking (it is, isn’t it?) to go through a writer’s output and circle the recurring images and themes and label them as autobiographical – as the juicy trauma they’ve edited out of their real lives and allowed to seep into their fictional ones. I don’t doubt lots of writers make conscious and unconscious use of their secrets and unspoken events like this. But it isn’t quite what I am talking about.

I reject the Romantic and romantic notion that a writer is more hurt, more embarrassed and more traumatised than the rest of the population and good writing comes from their working-out of that trauma. Life is often humiliating and frightening and crap for everyone and people who shuffle words are not special or more sinned-against. Trauma is boring and ordinary.

But trauma, or the things we don’t want to talk about, is important to writing. It doesn’t matter what the content of the trauma is. One person’s car-smash is another person’s disastrously violent c-section (plucking an example off the top of my head…) is another person’s wrong-shoes-for-the-party is another persons saw-my-parents-shagging. We have all got the things that we edit out of the stories we tell about ourselves.

It is important to writing because understanding the way this works is understanding one of the basic things about writing and noticing the way it is done in real life is practice for being a writer. In other words, writers are not more hurt, they are just more cold blooded about noticing the way they deal with the hurt – the editing is never complete because writers look at how they self-edit and replicate that when they’re dealing with sentences and paragraphs.

Having a sad secret isn’t unique. Picking the scab of your sad secret in front of the mirror (on a blog, in a poem, during a novel) is possibly a little bit more unusual / narcissistic / healthy / unhealthy / interesting / pathetic / useful because nothing makes you notice the difference between what we tell and what we show more. I’ve been invited back to the hospital for a chat with a professional that will, apparently, prevent me getting post-traumatic-stress-disorder. No thanks, says I, I’d rather suppress it, watch myself doing it and then blog about the process. Could come in handy for the next book (this is why writers don’t have friends – I’ve never heard of anything so vain in my life).

Body language experts call the signs – the ticks and twitches – the body makes when we are lying / omitting parts of the truth ‘tells’. They aren’t tells. They are (some of the) shows. Creative writers are instructed to avoid one and encourage the other – better teachers advise writers to be aware of which one they are doing, and control it. My narrators are all ‘tell’ and the interesting bit – the ‘show’ is the bit that is between the lines, the silent bit, the unwritten part.

How else did you think I learned how to do it?

The blog post was a response to Too Much Information which you can find, along with many other illuminating ruminations, at Not Designed to Juggle. The photograph, which is not as good as Diane’s, was taken by the Mr – who was slightly baffled by my weak laughter and insistence he take this snap for me because I wanted it for my blog.

Out on a Limb: the launch

Sunday, August 8th, 2010

Finally, the Out on a Limb website is here. Hooray! If you click here you’ll be taken by the magical power of the interwebs to a web of stories about the Wirral – the fruit of a project I worked on at the beginning of this year. The website is beautiful (that map was HAND DRAWN by Elaine) and if you click through to the participants’ blogs you’ll be able to comment on their stories, ask them questions about their writing process or anything else you can think of (they are looking forward to taking questions / compliments through their comment forms, so don’t be shy to weigh in with feedback for them) and see how the stories link together through images, themes, characters and settings.

I think the most rewarding part of this project, for me, was working with a small group of beginner writers and bloggers to create a permanent record of their memories, thoughts and experiences. Some of the stories are autobiographical or started out that way – and all of them capture authentic Wirral voices that, in some cases, we are publishing for the first time. If you like the stories, I’d also recommend you dig about in the blogs that all the participants kept as a record of the evolution of their story. The dead-ends, rejected ideas, eureka-moments, frustrations, abandoned drafts and alternative endings are a fascinating record of what it is like to invent a story and work on a collaborative project like this.

Now the ‘behind the scenes’ bit of the project is over, the site is also accepting new stories / poems and photography set in the Wirral. You don’t need to live there or work there to submit – but your story does need to be set there. We are hoping that over time the site will evolve into an on-line library of tales that will put a little-written about area on the map. Since I started tweeting about the stories last week (what you mean you don’t follow me on twitter?) I’ve already had a few submissions. Top Banana!

You can submit via the site, or you can email me about it. Stories will go up in batches and I’ll be tweeting lines from them over the coming weeks to generate some traffic. Your story should be under 1500 words, although we’re not going to be super strict about that – and it should stand on its own two feet, although if you want to link it to any of the original stories written by our first set of project participants (if you click on the links within my story you’ll see what I mean by this) then we’d hop with glee.

Less Things

Monday, August 2nd, 2010

No Ikea last night, but a back-yard full of sea-gulls. The kind with the red tip to their beak. We’ve only a little back yard and in my dream it was so crowded with the white birds that you couldn’t see through them to the flags – it reminded me, either during the dream or afterwards, of pictures of ‘barn’ hens – where the barn is so thick with feathered bodies you can’t see the floor. And they were all facing the same way, heads and beaks pointed in the same direction.

I haven’t been thinking about birds. Have been sleeping with head-phones on. I can’t have silence to sleep and can’t have music. The world service used to do it, but news about oil slicks and wars was making me worse. So a BBC adaptation of Lord of the Rings to listen to during and in-between wakings up. There are no seagulls in that, are there?

A growing fear of sea-gulls, although generally I think birds are fairly scary, and then two trips to the charity shop today.

General worries and fears include: the recycling, cat hair balls under the kitchen table, friends moving away, too many words, too few words, throwing things out, keeping them, sleeping, not sleeping, relative sizes of jeans in different shops, identity theft, ebay, the prospect of buying shoes to go with a new dress that hasn’t arrived yet, not being able to drive, roundabouts, corkscrews, wine.

I Make Stuff Up

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

I’ve had a week of furious typing, post-its, scribbling in pencil and… filling in forms. With the arrival of a new person into the world comes a whole host of forms needed to prove the poor blighter’s existence to the government / NHS / my landlord. He doesn’t even have a real pair of shoes yet (we have been remiss in this, but I’ve a novel to finish and in this house if you don’t walk, you don’t get shoes) and yet we’ve had to jump through all kinds of hoops to get him a birth certificate, registered with a doctor, alert the fine people at HMRC to his existence and justify my own continuing existence to a health visitor. All activities that are accompanied by forms, questions and questionnaires.

I’m a grumpy get at the best of times (you hadn’t noticed?) but PLEASE, when I’m working to a deadline, on much less sleep than I’d like and have a bit of a 1000 piece Disney jigsaw puzzle stuck to my hair with vomited breast-milk (he’s been easy on the crap, this past few days) DON’T look at me like I’m a deluded, sorry fantasist in need of intervention when you ask me what I do for a living for your bloody FORM and I answer honestly. Think of how many books there are in the world. Someone’s got to write them, haven’t they?

My favourite quiz of the week is the one they use to check if you’re depressed or not. Tick boxes. Do you feel like harming yourself and / or others a) never b) sometimes c) on a near constant basis. I answer C, and clarify that this isn’t a post-partum thing, but is how I always feel, especially when asked invasive questions by someone I’ve never met before who invited themselves around to my house and sneered at me when I told them what I do for a living, (really? That’s nice. And what did you do for a job?.) then followed it up by asking me what my husband thought of it… (very little, I should imagine).

I’m not going to tell these people I’m a writer any more. I’m going to say I’m a detective, a spy, a magician. I’m a consultant escapologist. I’m a private eye. I’m Columbo’s wife. I’m Mrs Hudson, Sherlock Holmes’ landlady. I’m Harriet the Spy. I’m a cross between Nancy Drew and Nana Mouskouri. I make stuff up. I type very fast in two hour bursts, sometimes at night, sometimes holding the baby, sometimes while eating breakfast.

Here’s an ambivalent review of A Kind of Intimacy from L-Magazine, ‘New York City’s Local Event and Arts And Culture Guide.’

Progress: The Photoshoot

Monday, July 19th, 2010

Click on the pictures to make them big and see them in a swish gallery type thing.

Spanner + Crap

Saturday, July 17th, 2010

The spanner in the works of my grand master plan (2-4 hours of editing a day until the end of August, fitted in around and between naps and/or achieved by foisting Offspring onto family / bystanders) is the Summer Holidays – which are fast approaching. How can I write when there’s no school during the day? How did I forget about the summer holidays? Who gets five whole weeks off?

Today and yesterday was my first taste of looking after two children at once and on my own. Cheesy Peeps! Highlights of the days include: being covered in crap at various points. Having crap (actual crap – I’m not being writerly here) in my hair. Taking a full three hours to get two children washed, fed and dressed and realising at the end of it I was neither washed, fed nor dressed myself. It will get less tricky as I do it more often, like everything does (except for driving, speaking in public, making friends, losing friends, writing books) but today I am shattered.

And need to do my 2-4 hours once Offspring are asleep.

Luckily, this quiet, painstaking, solitary type of work where the only noise is the scrape of the pencil and the clatter of my keyboard is exactly the sort of thing I want to do and just the sort of activity to soothe my frazzled nerves after my days of chaos. I also plan on devoting a tiny amount of time to preparing a speech directed at Himself – convincing him that we need to hire a wife of some kind; someone to look after us and deal with the crap (actual).

I am not good at realising I have (actual) crap in my hair, or working out how you’re supposed to take a shower when there are two small people competing for your attention, or stopping myself from unleashing a torrent of gutter-language when I realise, just as I’ve stood on a piece of Lego in my bare feet, again, that there’s crap on my bed (actual). I am not good at being able to cook / iron / drink tea with a baby under one arm AND a Small Fry demonstrating her new bubble dance.

I am good at fearsome amounts of will power and mind-over-matter type behaviour though. My self discipline is enormous. Never underestimate how much of writing well is turning up at the desk when you don’t want to. Bum in chair, every day, until the days stack up and become a novel. Joyce Carol Oates wrote in her journals that even when her ‘soul was as thin as a playing card’ and she felt she had nothing in her to put down on the page, she’d get to her desk and the act of writing sorted her out (I’m paraphrasing – too tired to go and get the book and check).

I am off to sharpen my pencils again. Wish me luck.

Book Deal + Bananas + Booths

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

Top Banana!

I have been dying to tell you for a little while now that Cold Light is going to be published in Spring 2011 by Sceptre. Sceptre publish lots of authors that I really like so it is terrific to be amongst such good company.

‘Terrific’ isn’t a word I’ve used a lot in my life. I don’t think I’ve ever said ‘fabulous’ aloud, in company either. At least while sober. There’s something about my natural hang-dog expression that makes any enthusiasm or pleasure I express come out as sarcasm. I try hard, but I can’t help it.

Splendid! Hmm.

Lancashire people sort of nod and sigh and say, ‘better than a poke in the eye with a blunt stick,’ or ‘not bad’ so we’ll do that for a little while instead.

Top Banana! *rubs hands*

I got the good news when I was in hospital in late May, and it was just the cheering up that I needed after being fairly ill for a couple of weeks and having a little bit of bad news about a job I hoped to get but lost the funding for at the last minute. You know now, I think, how I feel about bed rest and hospitals and people saying You Can’t, and In Your Condition and the millions of pounds you pay on cards for the telly on the extendable arm just to remind yourself why you don’t have a television at home anymore.

Sceptre are also going to be publishing the book after Cold Light too (as yet unnamed and only muttered about) although my tentative progress on that has been put on hold until after the summer, as I have a September deadline for the edited copy of Cold Light and there are a few jobs and tweaks I want to make to it before it goes off. I’ve been spending the last couple of days going over my new editor’s notes on the manuscript she’s seen, and the annotated copy of the book that she posted to me this week, and having a Hard Think about what I want to do about things.

Yes, I know I’ve just had a baby. The pram isn’t just in the hallway, it’s in the actual office and is suiting us just fine thank you very much.

I’ve never worked with an editor in this way before. It was very strange to have telephone conversations about my ideas. Normally when I’m writing I keep it all to myself. I’ve talked about some of my ideas for book three with the Northern Lines Fiction Workshop I helped set up (I reckon I will blog about this at some point too) and that helped, but it still felt odd. Even when I was doing my MA, I was more inclined to present my workshop group with the writing and let it speak for itself, scribble while they talked about it and digest the feedback in my own time rather than jump in with explanations and questions. So this is new. But I am not disliking it and I realise now I’ve been looking for something new – some way to stretch myself as a writer – for a while now.

For some reason, I thought it would be less exciting the second time round. The same is for books as it is for babies: it is different and nerve-racking and exciting in the same and different ways. Familiar in some ways you’d expect to be strange, with a new publisher and a new book, and strange in some ways you’d expect it to be familiar (I have done this before, after all).

I know some people liked the first book, but the second one is different. I couldn’t pull two Annies out of the bag, and the things I’m interested in writing about now are different than they were when I was twenty three*. It would be strange if they weren’t. So there’s that. And there’s the excitement too, that something I worked on for three years with no guarantee it would ever see the light of day (boom boom) will be in a bookshop early next year.

That bit is just as exciting now as it was the last time.

*I am twenty seven and just two days ago, while buying some birthday-present booze, I got asked for ID. This more than made up for the kick in the teeth I got at the school gates three days ago, when someone asked me when I was due to have the baby. Thank you, vigilant Booths check-out man. You are my hero.

Editing + Sound Track

Monday, July 12th, 2010

Hard at work for a little while at least, and working through my edits to Cold Light straight onto the manuscript with a new nice pencil which I get to stop and sharpen now and again. Desk cluttered with coffee mugs (I’m a tea-drinker, but I was also up five times last night) and two kinds of pencil sharpeners, post-it notes, a pile of books that I planned to while away my maternity leave reading (pfft!) and a bowl full of paper-clips that I made myself. The bowl, not the paper-clips. I think I’d like to go back to my pottery class this autumn.

Pencils are almost as good as fountain pens and bottles of ink for mid-sentence procrastination. Examining the lead, sharpening, rubbing things out and putting them back in again. Slowly, one line at a time. But not as good as deciding you need to listen to some of the songs mentioned in the book in order to make sure you’re ‘conveying atmosphere’ exactly right.

Readers, for your listening and viewing pleasure:

There and Back Again

Saturday, July 10th, 2010

I’m back now… hooray! Nice things happened while I was away. I had a new baby called McTiny (we’re both fine and fit and thank you for all the emails and messages I haven’t had chance to respond to yet) and A Kind of Intimacy was reviewed in The Boston Globe and King of The Little Magazines.

I’ve been out of the hospital a couple of days now and we’re gradually settling into things. Still managing to do a little bit of work during nap-times. It is good that I’ve been pre-trained by the Small Fry into managing interruptions, working in small bursts, sleeping in small bursts and typing, eating and loading a washing machine with a baby in the other hand because it’s not as hard as I thought it would be to settle into it again.

Gosh – hospital is depressing though, isn’t it? I’m not a people-person at the best of times and my privacy is really important to me. Spending nearly a week in a room with other people, their ugly babies and irritating visitors and having eyes touching me whenever I did anything did not do wonders for my mental health. I won’t mention the midwife who clattered between rooms at four in the morning, refusing to help me until she’d located the right colour blanket (can’t possibly wrap him in pink – who knows what would happen?) or the woman who slept all day and cried, loudly, into her mobile phone all night. Or the fact that I spent £15 quid on television. Or the whole ward being asked to confess who got the inside of the shower room wet (imagine us giggling, clutching at damaged midriffs and trying not to catch each other’s eyes). There were nice people there and good parts though. Like the midwife who stayed five hours after her shift ended, even though she had her own Small Fries and McTinies waiting for her at home – just because she wanted to make sure I was fine and settled before she went off duty.

And the over-hearings! Still time to perfect your submission to Bugged! As I was leaving, I heard one midwife say this to another one:

‘she was never the same after those incidents – you know, that series of events - last year.’

I shuddered. Steal it for a story if you wish, I’ve already got mine and my Bugged submission will be appearing on the website soon.

One last thing while I’m here: it has come to my attention that some of you are finding it tricky to subscribe to the feed for this blog. This is being sorted out, possibly as I type, but in the meantime, if you go to the front page and click on the orange button or use this address http://www.jennashworth.co.uk/feed that should work. Leave a message for me in the comments if you’re still having trouble.


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