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Chopsticks
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August 2016
Three Stages of a Writing Career
When you start out as a writer, you
often don’t have a lot of ideas. You scramble to find one or
two and you pin your hopes on them. You write the same book over and
over again, sometimes over the course of a decade. Some writers can
never give up that first book (and to be fair, some are right not to,
but in my experience, this is a tiny fraction of the people who are
still working on the same book after ten years). I think of this as
the early years.
You hear other writers give advice
about how to get ideas. From TV shows, from news articles, from other
books you wish you’d written or think you could have written
better, from your childhood, from dreams. You hear that you should
keep a notebook by your bedside, by the toilet, that you should get
crayons that can write on shower walls, so that any brilliant idea
you have, you can scribble down and preserve, because that’s
gold there, that’s what you’re going to make you’re
living on. You sit in front of the computer screen and sometimes type
the phone book, because you’ve heard that it matters that
you’re there, telling the muse that you’re available,
should she come to visit.
In these early years, you spend lots
of time going to conferences, listening eagerly to anyone who is a
little further along than you are, taking notes about ways to make
your manuscript stand out when you’re submitting it. (Hint:
different colored paper or a twenty dollar bill are not among them.)
You make lists of the new trends, manuscript wish lists on twitter,
hot new agents who are taking new clients, and editors who are
finding new talent or getting their authors awards (not that editors
do this, but you think that they do).
You buy books about writing by the
cartload. You underline advice, try out different plot formulas,
chart out your midpoint and climax as if they are going to get you
pregnant, and make a checklist of every emotion you’re supposed
to elicit in the reader to make sure you’re doing them all at
the right time. You try waking up early and staying up late to make
sure you’re getting enough hours in. You make daily word count
goals and get out stickers for your calendar to motivate yourself.
You find a writer’s group and worry about whether that one
person who rarely writes is pulling the rest of you down.
And then one day, you get published
and you move into a different stage of writing. Suddenly, you’re
trying to figure out how to manage school visits or library
appearances, how to get people to show up at signings, worrying about
what to do if you get lousy reviews, trying to negotiate the social
media scene as an author, wondering about your Goodreads presence and
wondering how publishers choose which authors go on tour (no one
knows this, but go ahead and worry, since you’re going to worry
about something anyway).
After that, you worry about
fulfilling the second book in your contract (although trust me, you
might as well assume that your next book will be rejected, and likely
the one after that—not that you should skip over the agony of
writing them and being rejected). You worry whether you’re
going to do better with your second book than your debut, and you are
dealing with jealousy when you see that other authors you think are
nastier or worse writers than you are having better sales and being
invited to conferences where they’re getting paid while you’re
asked to come on your own dime and the bookseller didn’t even
bother to bring any copies of your books to sign.
You may also spend this stage
looking gloomily at the long list you have now acquired of books that
you want to write. It’s a long list. It seems impossible that
you will ever actually get to all of those books, considering all of
the other things that are now taking up your time that have little to
do with writing: fan mail, interviews, keeping up with trends in the
market, and on and on. Maybe you’ll get one book written from
that list a year. If other authors suggest a collaboration, you
practically snarl at them because why would you want to work on a
book together when you have your list you have to get through before
you die? Writing short stories by invitation is flattering, and so
you do it, but that takes more time, and then you’re asked to
do copy edits over and over again.
You think that this stage will last
forever, that this is the rest of your life as an author, the
mentally frenetic need to do more, to squeeze in more time on
airplane flights, in hotel rooms, whenever you suffer insomnia, at
quiet church meetings, in the middle of dinner prep or while the rest
of the family is watching television.
It won’t, though. I’m
here to tell you. I was one of those people with the seemingly
endless list of books I wanted to write. I pushed away ideas
vigorously. If they didn’t come to harass me frequently, I
ignored them. I certainly didn’t keep a notebook to write ideas
down in after my first book was published. If ideas fell out of my
brain after a few minutes, good riddance!
And then, this year, I reached the
end of that long list of books. I have drafts of them all, though not
very many of them have been published. Some of the drafts need work.
Some came as far as I could take them and I’m waiting to see if
the publishing world changes and they will fit in somewhere. (No, I’m
not interested in self-pubbing them; that takes a lot of energy on my
part and promoting books, as an introvert, is excruciating).
I’ve been writing seriously
since 1994, when my first child was born. That child is now
twenty-two. All through that time, I felt like I was in a rush. I
would write “THE END” on one manuscript and then open up
an empty file to start a new one, without a day in between to
celebrate or take a breath of relief. I had to keep writing because
the ideas needed me to work on them. These were stories that mattered
to me deeply, even if they didn’t to anyone else. I truly
believed that I would never reach the end of the list. I figured that
I would never retire, that in my nineties, I’d still be waking
up at 5 a.m. so I could get some words in on the new book. I thought
that I would die never having finished my list.
But you know what? I’m OK with
where I am now. I don’t feel a need to demand more ideas out of
my head. And I’ve been trying to figure out why.
I suppose it’s partly that
I’ve reached a level of national attention that isn’t
always pleasant. The NYT Bestseller status that I once sought doesn’t
seem so desirable anymore if it comes with long book tours away from
home and family and public appearances that take days for me to
recuperate from. It’s also partly that I haven’t
published all those books, and it’s going to take me years
still to get each manuscript to the place where I want it to be (even
excluding publishers’ wishes) or to decide that a few are ready
to be given up on.
Do I think
more book ideas will come? Maybe. Maybe I will have short story ideas
again. I don’t know. I’m enjoying writing personal
essays. I’m enjoying letting my life slow down a little, even
if it’s only in my own head. I suspect that many writers come
to this stage eventually, though it could be that there are other
stages to come, or that the stages run in cycles.
I have achieved a lot of what I
wanted to achieve when I was a teenager, and a lot of things I never
thought to achieve. I’ve come to a place where I’m not
sure I want to achieve the rest of the things that used to be on my
list to signify “success.” I find happiness in smaller
things now, in eating a good meal, in sleeping in, in watching TV
without the guilt of feeling like I ought to be reading instead. I
guess I’m getting old, but to my surprise, it seems like a good
thing.
Read more by Mette Ivie Harrison