I scribbled the following on a plane last year as I flew
home to Aberdeen .
It was intended to be a happyish, light-hearted piece but it had a twist and,
anyway, I can now see it in a different light.
Soon I’ll be home after a few days in London . Not my favourite city (Paris is way ahead in
that race) but an exciting, fascinating place to be all the same. The
impression everywhere is that things are happening, people are on their way
somewhere. Even the Trafalgar Square tourists and the Oxford Street
shoppers seem purposeful. Actually, come to think of it, maybe that’s why I
prefer Paris .
Over there, they stop and sit sipping coffee and Pastis to watch the others go
by. I know it’s a cliché but they do linger over seemingly endless lunches and,
rather than try to catch up with time, they’re savouring it as it passes.
It suits my preference for languor over
action.
Having said which, one of the reasons for my trip was to
meet with a publisher to discuss writing a 100,000+ word non-fiction book. It’s
an interesting, challenging project and, unlike with fiction, there’s a
guarantee of publication (unless I make a complete mess of it all). It means
setting aside the languor and working full time to meet the deadline. I have no
idea what’ll happen to the blogging, tweeting and all that stuff, but with days
filled with solid writing, I think I’ll need some trivia to keep me going.
So this was supposed to be a relatively straight,
informative posting, but the notion just came to me that this writing business
fits into all the superhero stereotypes. People such as Billy Batson and Clark Kent live along
their ordinary lives, lost in the crowd. Suddenly, duty calls and, with a quick
detour to a phone box (harder and harder in these days of mobiles/cell phones)
or a cry of ‘Shazam’, they’re transformed into an extraordinary being. And so
it is with writers.
There they are tweeting, trying to remember the lead
singer of some forgotten 70s group for a Facebook challenge and generally
behaving like all the more or less adequate mortals around them when suddenly
they get the tap on the shoulder from their muse, agent or publisher and Blat!
they morph into creators of new universes, using their powers to help others
escape the mediocre. Only when the job is done do they switch off their power
source or put down their pen and disappear back into the humdrum.
Trouble is, it takes Captain Marvel and Superman maybe
twenty minutes to stop Jupiter crashing into the McDonald’s where some 5 year
old kids are celebrating a birthday party, whereas the poor writers have to
keep it up (and you can choose any of the double entendres you prefer at this
point) for months.
And that was it. But here’s the twist I mentioned. When I
got home and opened up the emails, there was a nice, polite message from the
publisher saying it would be good if the book could be finished by the end of
the year. Instead of the eight months I’d expected, I had just under four.
Needless to say, I indulged in self-pity, moaned about the demands placed on
the artist nowadays, and all sorts of similarly precious stuff. But I finished
the book in time, the word count was closer to 80.000, and the feeling of
achievement was very satisfying.
It also shattered the idea of the comparison with the
superhero. They don’t whinge. Did you ever hear Superman begging Lex Luthor to
take a time-out?
4 comments:
Congratulations, Bill; 80,000 words in four months is super hero status. You didn't mention the subject of your book and how much research was involved.
Thanks, Jean, but most of the research was either done by someone else or covered an area about which I knew enough to bluff my way through. It was the first of a series aimed at helping students to cope with the various demands of university and college life. Since then, I've written three more in the series and have just been asked to do another two. As I said, not as interesting or exciting as writing fiction but it does pay.
Bill, that's remarkable. Congratulations on the accomplishment, and also on being contracted to do the rest of the series.
Thanks Beth. But, without false modesty, I don't really think of it as an achievement - I think it's just that I can simplify things and maybe make them a bit more reader-friendly. And I only do that to make them comprehensible to myself. It's like when I got a job as a Writing Fellow at a university. I knew I could write but I had no idea of how I set about it, so I had to analyse the processes I went through. It was very instructive.
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