I finished cutting the lawn around 5:30, and since I had
already had a light supper, I decided to pack up my computer and head down to
Read’s to write for a few hours. With the weather hot and sunny, I knew most
people would want to sit at the bistro tables outside rather than the comfy
chairs inside. I need a power outlet handy in the likely event my computer loses
its charge. I also need to be able to
sit where there is no glare on my screen.
The air conditioning also helps.
And the coffee, which is always great there.
An author friend wrote to me recently, asking if I would
like to participate in a blog tour of sorts.
She is also a blogger, and she asked if I could share some insight into
how I go about planning, drafting, and publishing my pieces. I was very honoured to be asked to
participate. I have been blogging for
almost three years, and my viewership is somewhat limited to family and
friends. I don’t go out of my way to promote it. Most of the time, I’m not sure why I do it in
the first place. Writers write in
anticipation of getting discovered, perhaps even published, right?
I should really begin at the beginning, since blogging
sometimes doesn’t necessitate a beginning or an ending. If you back track through my entries, you’ll
notice that the first few paragraphs often start as a sort of preamble, which
may or may not tie in as tidily as I’d like with the main body. I often edit them, sometimes drastically, but
in the end I usually leave them intact.
Blogging is different from most forms of writing in that it is innately
raw. The fact is, most bloggers are not
trained writers. Blogging is a recent
phenomenon, although not entirely. My
grandmother is in her early nineties, and has written boxes of diaries and
journals in her lifetime. She wrote
mostly about the weather, current events, and people who stopped by to visit
her. She wrote about her day-to-day
experiences, not unlike I do with my blog.
The difference is that she kept her work private, and she never wrote in
a way that would lend itself to public viewing.
If you keep a diary or journal, in a sense, you’re a blogger.
It also makes you a writer.
There is a misconception about writers. They have to be super-smart. They are always eccentric. They’re artsy hipsters that wear hemp
bracelets and pierce their tongues. They
read obscene amounts every single day. They’re
total snobs. They all love Margaret
Atwood. Writers are stereotyped as much
as any segment of society. I know
writers that may or may not fit any combination of the above.
How do I rank in all this? I graduated with a 76% average. I did well in English and History courses,
but struggled greatly with Math and Science, so it kind of averaged out. I like to read, but I wouldn’t say I love
it. I am a very slow reader. I often back up and reread paragraphs, and
sometimes whole chapters to be sure I didn’t miss anything. It’s possible I need reading glasses. I like learning, and as a result, I have
diverse tastes in movies, music, and books.
I truly hope people don’t view me as a snob. I’ve yet to enjoy a Margaret Atwood novel,
but I respect her for what she has accomplished. I have never owned a hemp bracelet. Yet a writer I am.
In the spirit of the blog tour, I am including some
headers for paragraphs, which I don’t normally do in my usual posts. That’s okay, because when you are taking part
in something beyond your norm, and indeed your comfort zone, you sometimes have
to follow along. Following along is
fine, because ultimately writers will blaze their own trails regardless.
How
do you start your writing projects?
I am not an author.
For many years I have labeled myself ‘aspiring author’. That’s like saying you’re almost finished a
degree. It’s all well and good that you’re
doing it, but it’s ultimately not as impressive that you haven’t actually
finished. Starting a blog in essence
provided me an opportunity to work on smaller pieces that I knew I could finish
relatively quickly. It gave me a sense
of accomplishment. Ask any would-be
author, and they’ll tell you they have countless ideas in a virtual ‘parking
lot’ just waiting to be drawn out. Some
are in sketch books in various degrees of development. Some are on scraps of paper, some gestating
for months, even years in tattered Hilroy scribblers. My ideas are all over the place, scattered
over some five or six different flash drives I occasionally lose and find again
over and over. I’m getting better the
older I get; I have one flash drive that I try to keep all writing on now, and
I back up my major works on my computer.
They can’t both go missing, can they?
How
do you continue your writing projects?
If you’d like to get the true muse behind The Hole In The Fence, I’d recommend
reading my first entry, called ‘The First Glimpse’. I would then also draw your attention to an
entry I wrote about a year later called ‘Quit Stalling’. I wrote that one out of guilt, because I had
stepped away from the blog for several weeks.
When you start a blog, it becomes a commitment to which only you hold
yourself accountable. ‘Quit Stalling’
was more a pep talk to myself to just sit down and start writing after a period
of non-productivity. It turned out
decent enough, so I posted it. What I
try to keep in my blog is that rawness of the ideas themselves. I still try to edit to the best of my
ability. One of my goals is to
strengthen my writing as I continue to work on my fiction.
What makes a blog a blog?
It is, again, unique as a form of writing in that it can be anything the
writer wants it to be. A product of the
internet, and visible via the world-wide web anywhere you can pick up a wi-fi
signal, you can make your blog as plain or extravagant as you want. Some blogs are intricately designed with
tabs, links, videos, pictures, and other whistles and bells. Not all of these are necessarily great blogs
either. I have read very prominent blogs
that have, in my opinion, awful writing, with no attention to basic conventions
and principles of the written language.
What the audience likes in blogs like these is the visceral reactions,
the bombast, the shock and awe.
Once you decide to write a blog, what will be its
identity? I mentioned above that some
blogs are great, others less so. What
makes one good versus bad? Like any form
of entertainment, there is no universal standard. Lots of people love Lady Gaga, while I think
she’s mediocre at best. I wouldn’t claim
she’s any good, but most pop music fans like her. I’ve seen movies that critics lambasted, but I
thoroughly enjoyed. 50 Shades Of Grey was immensely popular, but the few paragraphs I
read were mind-numbing. If you are an
artist, some people will like your work, while others won’t. That’s the nature of being an artist. I get a lot of positive feedback from my
writing, but I am sure I could send my work to hundreds of publishers only to
have them rip me to shreds. That’s
another benefit to blogging. It is good
for your self-esteem, if only in the moment.
I chose to keep my blog observational at its core. My favourite writers are two ‘Andy’s. Andy MacDonald, the subject of my penultimate
posting, was an extraordinary story teller.
He took simple, everyday happenings and created wonderfully witty
tales. His books are among the select
few I reread frequently. The other is
the late Andrew Rooney. Best known for
his commentary on 60 Minutes, Andy
was a columnist who shot from the hip, telling it exactly as he saw it, but had
the poise to tackle challenging issues without necessarily tipping his hand one
way or the other. He was able to present
his views without being preachy. He left
the reader to make up his or her own mind.
I try to approach my blog with both Andy’s’
principles. I want people to smile when
they read it. I’d like them to be able
to relate my work to their own experiences.
I suppose most writers seek a connection with their audience, and I’m no
different. I’ve noticed that my entries
that have a sentimental basis are the best received. Some of the pieces of which I’m most proud
are among the least viewed. Some of them
were, at the time they were published, excellent, while I now look back on them
as rubbish. One thing I’ve promised
myself not to do is to go back and overhaul them. I might fix grammar here and there, because I
have no editor, and can’t always catch everything no matter how long I revise
them, but the content has to remain the same.
‘The Fence’ is a scrap book, and it represents me as a writer at the
time I wrote it.
How
do you finish your projects?
What are my routines?
There’s not much magic to share, I’m afraid. I often wonder if other writers feel like the
Wizard of Oz, terrified to be exposed. Tonight,
I showed up at Read’s, my favourite little coffee shop, bought a medium decaf
because it’s after supper, set myself up in a comfy chair near an outlet, and
started a new document. It’s taken me
about an hour and a half to write what you’ve just read, and as I literally
type these words, I’ve yet to look back beyond this paragraph. I will have, of course, by the time it’s
published to ‘The Fence’. Ideas are
floating around for my next entry, but it might be another month before it’s
developed enough to publish. Then again,
I might find myself inspired tomorrow morning, and before nightfall the next
entry will be up. This represents the 35th
official ‘Fence’ blog post, because I don’t count the two short stories and my
annual top twenty albums list that appear.
In three years, that averages out to once a month, which may or may not
be slow compared to other bloggers. I
have a friend who blogs almost daily, and I admire what he’s doing. While his are brief, concise pieces, mine
tend to average around three or four pages each on a standard Word document in
size 12 font. I think it takes great
skill to write within smaller parameters.
I have a background graphic, but otherwise no photos or video
links. It’s just not my style.
Other bloggers, as I mentioned earlier, prefer to lay it
all out there, as though they just sneezed their ideas all over the
screen. Some of them get a staggering
amount of hits. I try to aim for more
stringent, well-developed ideas, with an emphasis on quality over
quantity. I’m probably displaying that
writer snobbery, but I won’t apologize for my motivations. If I can only share one piece of advice, it’s
to never compromise your artistic integrity.
Write for your own reasons. You don’t
have to reveal what’s behind the curtain.
Everyone else will just have to deal.
Hi Brandon—I’m Alisa (1/2 of the Clifford Rush writing team) and I’m also part of the IC Summer Blog Tour. I liked your part about … Blogging is different from most forms of writing in that it is innately raw. ‘Innately raw’ is a superb phrase. Your tip on … never compromise your artistic integrity, along with the last paragraph of your post, also provides more insight. Thanks for sharing. You can see my post here: http://www.cliffordrush.com/2014/07/mary-mary-quite-contrary-ic-blog-tour/
ReplyDeleteIt's reassuring to know that no one has to reveal what's behind the curtain
ReplyDeleteWe had this conversation not long ago, Kathryn--writing is the ultimate freedom. Listen to constructive criticism, of course, but you and only you decide the parameters of your work. I hope you're still writing, you have a tremendous talent!
ReplyDelete