Monday, January 5, 2015

On Being a Writer: Writing


In 2013, a study by three researchers at the University of Toronto suggested that people who read literary fiction are more comfortable with ambiguity, tend to avoid snap judgments and can deal better with disorder and uncertainty. Publishing in the Creativity Research Journal, the researchers found that reading fiction may help people open their minds. (You don’t have to read the entire study; a short and succinct article in Salon translates the study from the original Academic-ese.)

Business executives don’t read novels to help them make decisions. But perhaps they should read novels to help them understand the culture around them. They might make better decisions as a result.

I’ve spent a career writing non-fiction – speeches, articles and essays. And I read the business stuff I had to read – The Wall Street Journal and a multitude of business and trade publications. But I also read a considerable amount of fiction and poetry, and the understanding followed was reflected in my career work. I don’t think I could have written  a lot of what I did without having read Charles Dickens, for example, or The Jungle by Upton Sinclair (as bad a novel as it was, it changed the laws governing food production).

Reading fiction and poetry also leads me to ask myself questions, like “what are you trying to say in your own fiction?”

I have two published novels and a third is in the works. I would be kidding myself and everyone else if I claimed to have had specific themes in mind when I started writing. What I had in my mind was the story at hand, a story that kept insisting it be told. I wasn’t thinking of grand ideas or themes; I was completely focused on telling a story, this story that often seemed to have a life of its own and characters who did things I didn’t plan on them doing.

In On Being a Writer: 12 Simple Habits for a Writing Life That Lasts, Charity Craig (co-author with Ann Kroeker) says this: “We have something to say that can come only from us. Though we often find ourselves, our lives, in the pages of others, what’s missing? Where is the story, the perspective, the hope that only I can express? I can look and look for it, but I’ll never find it until I sit down and write.”

I can reread those two novels now, and I can see the themes and ideas. But they were not, and are not, intentional. But they are there, and I don’t really know what they are until I sit down and write:

There is nobility in the world. There are people who know, who live, what it means to serve.

It is possible to act honorably, no matter what trials or disasters one faces.

There is evil in the world, but it will not overcome the good.

The best way to teach people about God is to live as God would have you live.

Forgiveness is a gift, a gift to give and a gift to receive.


In this same chapter of On Being a Writer, co-author Ann Kroeker tackles what is likely the most common issues every writer faces – finding the time to write.

There is no such thing as “ideal conditions” for writing. “If I wait for ideal conditions,” says Ann Kroeker, “I’ll get nothing done.”

Exactly.

I have written early in the morning and late at night. I’ve written on airplanes and in hotel rooms. I’ve written on buses. I’ve taken notes and jotted down ideas at symphony performances, in business meetings, and listening to presentations. I’ve written longhand on paper and in journals, in bed, at my desk, at someone else’s desk, in cars (when someone else was driving). I’ve written on hikes and on trains. I’ve written in the back of taxi cabs. I’ve written whenever I squeeze another moment for writing. I’ve written when I had the flu.

There are no ideal conditions for writing. If you are a writer, you write.

It’s like breathing.

Photograph by Ken Kistler via Public Domain Pictures. Used with permission.

4 comments:

Mary Sayler said...

Glynn, I'm glad you're breathing! and reading and writing and helping other members of our Facebook group. Thanks. I'll highlight this on the Christian Poets & Writers blog - http://christianpoetsandwriters.blogspot.com.

Planes, Trains, Roads | Charity Craig said...

Glynn - I feel like we are sitting in on an MRI of your writing life. Thanks for opening up your practices, habits, and thoughts to us.

L.L. Barkat said...

Love this. And, upon reading it, I think if I had to choose between the two designations, I'd probably call myself a Reader before I'd call myself a Writer. It's my sort of breathing :)

Megan Willome said...

I listened to an interview with the authors of that study. It confirmed what I already believe. :) But I think reading all kinds of fiction helps. And of course, I think poetry helps even more. But what do I do for a living? Write nonfiction!