No
definitions today, no argument or debate. A couple of very personal thoughts.
First
thought has to do with self-publishing. Everyone, it seems, is doing it. A few
hold themselves to the highest standards of research, writing, editing, design,
etc. Over the years I’ve seen a handful of excellent self-published books. At the other end of the spectrum are
poorly written, in-need-of-editing, cheaply packaged vanity offerings, the bane
of any bookseller’s existence. And of course there is a wide range in between.
Well, I’m self-publishing my stories, and (as is the case with my blogs) without benefit of an editor, but my stories are not on paper, not between
covers, and you don’t have to pay to read them. I’ve been putting them here on
my blog (most recent on previous post), tossing them out into the world like
messages in bottles cast out upon the waves. They may sink, or they may swim,
but anyone can read them or not, like them or not, all without spending a cent
or taking home another book to crowded shelves. If I had a publisher, I’d also
have an editor and a publicist and a book designer and more, working on my
behalf to make my book worth its cover price. Don’t have that. Am not asking
for money. Am not competing with writers who have given their lives to the hard
work of writing. (I have given my last 19 years to the hard work of bookselling,
and I’ve learned a lot about writers’ lives in that time.) For now, my primary identity is as a bookseller.
Second thought occurred to me years ago in another context and was reinforced
by my recent reading of William Stafford’s Writing the Australian Crawl. That is, the quickest way to
kill one’s inner creative spirit is to be afraid that “It will never happen
again!” I could hold onto these ten stories and nurse the dream that someday
they might be published between covers under the aegis of a real publishing
house, keeping them in a drawer until then, out of fear that these stories
might be all I’ll ever write, but I need to have more faith in myself than that. I need to trust whatever mystery gave them to me in the first place.
I don’t
know where these stories came from. All I know is that the first morning I woke up in Florida two
years ago, the character of the first story was already in my head. I got
up and started writing, and in two months I had all ten stories. They were not
planned. Even the final story, the one that brings the rest together, was not
something I saw ahead of time. So what I have to trust is that when my life is
once again, for however long a stretch of time, free of scheduled obligations,
more characters and stories will emerge from the mysterious deep.
Letting go of these, letting them out in the world without expecting a return from them, is my
leap of faith.
6 comments:
Pamela,
How did I not know about this blog? As a fellow toe-dipper into self-publishing and a muser of the creative process, I love this entry. You might enjoy my blog, northbynorthport.blogspot.com
Thank you, as always, for Dog Ears!
Dear Northport Muse, how did I not know about yours? Thank you for visiting. I'm glad you stumbled upon Books in Northport and sent me the link to your blog, also. I enjoyed my first visit there--and saw a familiar face or two, as well.
I think because writing comes from the most personal of places within us it is often difficult, almost scary, to let it out in the sunshine of public scrutiny. But I'm glad you did!
People who write memoir (your comment reminds me, Dawn) must have a whole different set of issues. My first author guest of the summer, Fleda Brown, tells her own personal stories in brilliantly inventive ways. I'll write more about her book the beginning of next week, as she will be at Dog Ears a week from today.
I so admire your attitude, Pamela. That is a wonderful mantra: letting our creative children out into the world without expecting a return from them. That is a leap of faith. It's hard, but possible... I trust with you that the mysterious deep will continue to fill the deep creative well within, and you'll let the stories out to the light.
Kathy, it has taken me a long, long time to be able to embrace this attitude as my own. In graduate school, I had a dream about opening a philosophy and bait shop, and then the dream turned into a NIGHTMARE when SOME OTHER PHILOSOPHER OPENED A BAIT SHOP BEFORE I COULD OPEN MINE! It sounds funny, and it IS funny, but while I was in the dream it was horrible. That's a fear it's good to have left behind.
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