Casting on is an imperfect process which gives the appearance of perfection. A line of neat little stitches, the beginning of something bigger. It takes on a presence at this … Continue reading Poorly knitted
Casting on is an imperfect process which gives the appearance of perfection. A line of neat little stitches, the beginning of something bigger. It takes on a presence at this … Continue reading Poorly knitted
The novel is continuing, slowly. I must admit, I’m not enjoying the process of writing it as much as I would like. Some days I have to force myself to turn up, so to speak.
I’ve asked myself many times what the problem is. I think it comes down to this: writing a first draft is just hard work, however you look at it. Particularly if you don’t begin with a clear plan. It isn’t supposed to be easy.
It’s hard to motivate oneself when you know that you will be changing large swathes of what you are producing to make it fit for human consumption. But that’s the process. Write, revise, re-write and so on. Time consuming but hopefully worth it in the end.
I wonder if this is how all writers feel? I suspect some people genuinely enjoy their work every day. Don’t get me wrong: I still love writing. It doesn’t have to be pure joy every time I sit down to it. Sometimes it can just be work.
I stole the first one when I was still at school.
Nervous, waited till it was quiet,
a little haiku no one would notice
slipped into the pocket.
The thrill was overwhelming.
I needed to take another.
This time I was more ambitious;
I chose one we’d done in English:
Stealing by Carol Ann Duffy
because I liked the irony.
I don’t think she even noticed it was gone.
I felt the words trickle over my hands
Like lemonade from stolen fruit
Wonderful, contraband words.
I bathed in them
I drank them.
I almost got caught when I went
to take that Armitage one
and after that I stopped for a bit
but gradually the old feelings came back.
I found myself sneaking out at lunch
to pilfer a Jackie Kay or a John Agard;
returning to my desk, full of my secret,
stolen words
Dem Tell Me
scrunched up in my pocket.
But it wasn’t enough.
I wanted more.
I couldn’t sleep
for thinking about them.
All of those words waiting for me
They called to me
I needed them.
I lost control
I took every poem I found
And even then I didn’t stop;
Morphemes became my morphine.
I started taking other words;
From manuals or newspapers
Or government reports.
That’s when they caught me.
The Chancellor of the Exchequer
was lost for words
When they found me,
Speech concealed in my bag.
I’m better now.
I only take the words I need.
I don’t
I can’t
I never
I
Closing Time
The bar is covered in a thick layer of grease and dust which comes away when I scrape my finger along it. The windows are too. The only light is from a yellow bulb above the bar. ‘It’s time to go,’ says the man. There’s no one else here. I put down my glass, noticing it also has a film of greasy dirt around the rim. Its dark outside and when I open the door I realise that there’s nothing out there. ‘It’s time to go,’ repeats the man.
Breath
His final breath left his body at 9:32am. His wife was by his bedside. She was relieved. She had been sitting here for three days, listening to his breathing stop and then start again. By 9:33 she was starting to realise that this time it was real. At 9:34 she opened the curtains and looked at the day. She still expected him to inhale, but he didn’t.
Faces
The day her mother died Rachel forgot her face almost instantly. She spent days looking at photographs to try to create new memories but her mother’s living face was replaced by still images, which themselves faded quickly. After a few weeks she found she couldn’t remember anybody’s face. People she had known for years were unrecognisable. Her own reflection was a stranger. On her seventieth birthday she looked in the mirror and her mother looked back at her.
Writing is fun.
I’m finding myself having to repeat the above, like a mantra. Truthfully it hasn’t been much fun lately; I have a self imposed deadline to finish my novel, and I’m getting nowhere fast. I’m a perfectionist. Not one of the write-first-edit-later crowd (and yes, I know that’s the most effective way to write).
I’ve gone back to the drawing board more times than I care to admit. Each time I promise to myself that this time I’ve got it right.
So, here I am again. Back to sub-10,000 words. But it will be a better novel. This time I’m genuinely happy with it. For now.
I’m also trying to find the joy in writing again. That feeling when you’re on a roll, and the words are tumbling out. And you know that what you’re writing is good. Your characters are likeable, you have a clear story trajectory, and you’re no longer worrying about whether it will appeal to a mass audience because it doesn’t matter so much. You like it, and are proud of it. That’s the way to approach writing. That’s what I’m trying to achieve.
I’m a reluctant convert to story planning; I always preferred to just write. Writing without a structure is easier and therefore more fun, but unfortunately it can lead to a disjointed end product. So now I plan, but not forensically – I still like to ‘pants’ some stuff. The best ideas I have come to me while writing, and often they mess up what I’m planning to do – but the idea is too good to ignore. Hence the over-used drawing board.
Finally, eventually, I will have a completed novel and then perhaps my method will make sense. And if I don’t, well, at least I’ll be able to say I enjoyed the process.
Well, mostly.
This is my first attempt at a Villanelle poem…about Villanelle from Killing Eve, the latest in my series of poems inspired by characters from film and TV. Villanelle and Eve … Continue reading Villanelle
Because this is what we had left When the fields were gone. Because our feet had become scorched On cracked tarmac. Because the unthinkable Had become the inevitable. Because … Continue reading A Poem for the End of the World
The field is longer than you expect it to be. The dog can be free there, remembering A time before leashes. A place to stretch yourself and shout And be … Continue reading Meadow Walk
I think it’s Christmas Day. It looks like Christmas Day. Or like my idea of what Christmas Day ought to look like, based on years of working in TV advertising … Continue reading Christmas Day
This poem is about Sadako, the antagonist from The Ring. It was something about the eyes, he said. She’s not right. He wasn’t wrong. I would sit there and watch … Continue reading Gift