Saturday, April 30, 2011

The Downside of Being a Writer


Writing is the only profession where no one considers you ridiculous if you earn no money. ~ Jules Renard

I’ve been sick on and off all week with a horrendous cold. One of the problems with being a writer is that there is no sick pay. There aren’t any retirement benefits either. Recently I heard an interview with Lisa Lutz and David Hayward, co-authors of Heads You Lose. Hayward describes himself as a retired poet. Although he probably doesn’t draw a pension from that, it sure sounds good. 

There was a request to see my book cover, so here it is:


Friday, April 22, 2011

Cover Story


To write something, you have to risk making a fool of yourself.” ~ Anne Rice

My editor sent me the cover of my book, Free from Hepatitis C. It is like seeing your baby on ultrasound for the first time. I am beside myself with excitement. The left side of the book, along the spine and margin is green marble. In the center is a soft, rosy drawing of an abdomen, featuring a gorgeous liver. The title is above and my name is below the drawing.

The book seems so real now that it has a cover and a liver…

Friday, April 15, 2011

Paleontology

"Writing isn’t hard — no harder than ditch digging." — Patrick Dennis

My new public vow: “No more public vows.” No, I didn’t start my new book on Monday; instead, I edited the one that will be published. Apparently public accountability does not work with me. Good thing I didn’t say I was going on a diet, or I’d be 5 lbs. heavier now.

Today I heard an interview with Richard Leakey (while not working on my book). The interviewer asked Leakey to describe what it is like to work on an archeological dig. Leakey says it is mostly pure drudgery, but it doesn’t feel like drudgery because you believe that you will find something; otherwise you would not do it. And when you do find something, it feels great, and worth the drudgery.

This describes writing. The task itself isn’t much fun, but the occasional discovery or coming together of words is worth every moment.  From where I sit, the major difference between writing and paleontology is that writing doesn’t require sun block or a hat.

Friday, April 8, 2011

Late Blooming



"Writing is 90 percent procrastination: reading magazines, eating cereal out of the box, watching infomercials. It's a matter of doing everything you can to avoid writing, until it is about four in the morning and you reach the point where you have to write." - Paul Rudnick


Reading is one of my favorite aspects of vacations, especially reading on a plane. Every once in a while, I will read something compelling—even potentially life changing—which happened to me on my way home from Costa Rica. Reading Late Bloomers in a collection by Malcolm Gladwell (found in What the Dog Saw) felt like I was being hit by hope in the form of a two by four.

Gladwell writes about discovering our gifts late in life, exemplified by Ben Fountain, a real estate attorney who gave up his practice in order to write. Fountain worked at his craft for years before success set in. He writes every day from 7:30 a.m. until lunchtime, then breaks for awhile and returns for a few hours before quitting for the day. In other words, he structured his writing as if it were a job, which in his case (and in mine), it is.

So this morning, fresh from vacation, I decide to start my work day earlier—at 7 rather than 9. I get up, brimming with enthusiasm and determination, and before I know it, I am balancing the checkbook, doing laundry, and checking my emails. In other words, I got distracted.  For me and other writers, distraction is like deciding to stop in Miami on a trip from San Francisco to Seattle, and then forgetting about Seattle. My ability to sidetrack my writing is my biggest problem, because once I am on track, I am unstoppable. Ditto for once I am off track.

So today, I state publicly my vow to bloom. Monday morning at 7 a.m. I start my new book.