Marie Arana has compiled a collection of fifty-five writers
from several different genres. Each
chapter starts with an introduction by Arana who gives a brief biography and
commentary on the writer and is followed by an essay by that writer. Most writers talk about what they write about
and why. Many of them go into how they
come up with the material, organize it and flesh it out. Others give interesting perspectives on
specific cultural or sociological situations.
Part one is titled, On Becoming a Writer. Several popular writers provide essays on how
they became writers. Authors include
Joyce Carol Oates, James Michener, Mary Higgins Clark and John Keegan.
Part two is called Raw Material where writers give the
reader an insight as to where they gather their material. Authors include Alice Mc Dermott, Jayne Anne
Phillips and John Edgar Wideman. George
P. Pelecanos explains how he comes up with his crime stories.
An especially interesting essay is by Scott Turow titled,
Can Whites Write About Blacks? I thought
his insight to the racial tension between the two races was perspicacious. This particular essay was one of the most
well articulated and researched of all of them.
Not that all the authors didn’t write well, but Turow’s lawyer
background must have given him the ability to deal with a sociological theme in
a way that was informative and absorbing.
It was also interesting to discover that the author of Presumed
Innocent and The Burden of Proof wrote his books on the train ride to his
law office and continues to practice law.
Parts three and four (Hunkering Down and Old Bottle, New
Wine) include authors from different genres, such as historical writing (David
McCullough) and science fiction (Ray Bradbury).
Other authors include Patricia Cornwell, Stanley Karnow, E.L. Doctorow,
and Umberto Eco. Some, like Eco, discuss the problematics involved in translating
a book from the original language into another.
Richard Selzer, who is a surgeon, writes on how he uses his job to
provide plot lines and accurate information to his stories, which, naturally,
center around doctors and hospitals.
Others tell us how they research for the historical nonfiction. Ray
Bradbury gives us some extremely interesting background to his life and what
his intentions are with his stories (“they’re all metaphors”).
Part Five, Facing the Facts, are a collection of authors who
write nonfiction. Carl Sagan has an
essay here and so does Jimmy Carter.
Stacy Schiff lets us know that each of her biographies are love affairs
and letting each of them go is extremely difficult.
The final section, Part six (Looking Back) has essays of authors,
Carol Shields, Jane Smiley and Ward Just.
My favorite was of Michael Chabon, although I can’t help feeling a
little bit jealous. How many of us would
die to have a college professor submit our work to a literary agent, without
telling us, and end up with a nice, fat, writing contract? Chabon eventually
wound up winning the Pulitzer Prize for his book, the Adventures of Kavalier
and Clay.
Every essay is interesting in their own way because it gives
you the back story of people who started out like the rest of us but were
propelled to success through various means.
I also like getting inside the head of other writers and seeing what
makes them tick. It also lets us know
that there is no one way to write.
Of all the essays the one I found the most telling was by Michael
Korda. Korda is not a writer but an
editor. He reveals in his essay the
difference between people who write literature and writing whores. I know that’s a vulgar term but I don’t know
how else to describe them. For them it’s
all about the money and they don’t care what kind of tripe or trash they have
to put out to get it. They’re hugely
successful too, so if making a lot of money is your goal...whatever.
Korda describes his
session with one particular popular writer who writes erotica. She
“liked to have me sit across from her in her pink
bedroom...so I could read each page as it came from her pink typewriter (on
pink paper) and edit it on the spot.”
Korda goes on to state that this woman was not only open to
plot suggestions but demanded them. Page
by page she went over every thing with her editor. It wasn’t about writing art, it was about
making sure the product was marketable.
“When warned that one of the book clubs might not take her
novel because...it was too shocking, Jackie said... “I don’t write for middle
aged men in suits. I write for women on
the subway.”
Then there was Graham Green who
“...neither needed nor accepted editorial changes. Greene’s manuscripts arrived on my desk with
a forbidding, neatly typed note on the title page that read, “Please do not
change any of Mr. Greene’s punctuation or spelling!” When his previous publisher had expressed
some doubt about the title of one of Greene’s books, he had received a terse
cable in reply that read: “EASIER TO
CHANGE PUBLISHER THAN TITLE. GREENE.”
I’m under no illusion that I am the next Graham Greene, but
I take comfort in the fact that we share the same principles when it comes to
writing.
In conclusion, this is a great book for those who are aspiring
writers and an interesting and enjoyable read for those who would like to know
more about their favorite authors.
http://mariearana.net/the-books/the-writing-life/
http://mariearana.net/the-books/the-writing-life/
2 comments:
I often think about writers, how, at least from the point of view of looking at their output, they all seem so different. This book looks to she some fascinating insights on them.
The quote from Graham Green is hilarious.
Brian: It was a very interesting book. Not one to be read in one gulp. I read an author a day until I was done. Yes, I very much would like to have the autonomy over my work as Graham Greene one day. So far I don't and I've been pretty upset over how a few editors have butchered my articles.
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