Below is a piece I first posted a couple years. I hope you enjoy.
Wishing each and everyone of you a wonderful new year.
Robin
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Identifying the specific traits that make a writer is a difficult
assignment. By contrast, defining a
non-writer is easy. The non-writer talks
(and talks and talks) but never actually puts his fingers on the keyboard.
I’ve stopped discussing my projects with these
non-writers. Why? Because the response is nearly always the
same: “You know, I should write a
book.” And of course, that profound
statement is consistently followed by:
“It’ll be a best seller.”
In a prior life (last year), I tried to help these wayward
souls reconnect with the mother-ship.
Below is a compilation of my attempts.
ME: What will your
book be about?Clueless in Seattle: It’s about a wizard. He goes to Rome to save Catholicism by killing the Pope—who’s turned into a vampire.
Cole Kreme: I don’t know but it’ll have lots of sex so it won’t be boring.
Ima Borin: It’ll be my life story, starting with my advanced mastery of potty training and will continue on through my fourth marriage.
Nita Klue: It’s about this mermaid. Except she doesn’t have fins and she doesn’t live in the ocean.
Olive Miya Poopa: I plan to write about how toilet paper is made. It’ll be a kid’s book.
Future Bestsellers (Multiple People/Personality): It’s about my mother (father/child/ex-husband/drill sergeant/psychiatrist). My therapist says it’ll be good to get it down on paper.
ME: What genre do
you plan to write?
Morrel, Marge R.T.: Oh, I don’t write that racy
stuff. I want something the entire
family can read.Drew A. Blanque: There are no Johns in my book.
Clueless in Seattle: My book will be written in English.
Ima Borin: I thought I’d just use regular paper.
ME: Have you taken any writing classes? Attended any workshops?
Paige Turner:
I took four years of high school English. Since my poem won first-place in the third
period “Beauty of Spring” contest, I don’t need any more classes. Otter Noah: I don’t need any classes. My book will write itself.
Clueless in Seattle: You have to take a class to write a book? That’s just not fair.
O. Mai: Workshops? Is that for binding the book once it’s written?
ME: Do you know anything about manuscript formatting?
Clueless in Seattle: I’m not writing a manuscript, I’ll write the whole book.
Nita Klue: My editor will take care of all that stuff.
Doug A. Hole: I’ll just do a hardcover book. I’m not too fond of those computer novels.
ME: You know writing is hard work, right?
Chase N. Mattel: Nah. I’ll just use the tape-recorder on my way to Myrtle Beach. My wife can type my novel when we get home.
Heir, Hedda: How hard can it be? You think, you type, you staple the pages together.
Clueless in Seattle: Whaddya mean? Like it’ll take more than a month?
Otter Noah: Maybe for you, but my book will write itself.
ME: Do you have a
publisher in mind?
Doug A. Hole:
Once I finish with my book, I figure I’ll just look at the NYT
Bestseller list and contact the company that has the most books on it. They’ll jump at the chance to publish me.Missy N. Link: Well, once I go on the Today Show, that’ll take care of my publicity.
ME: So have you actually started your novel?
Heir, Hedda: No, but the entire book is in my head.
Chase N. Mattel: I plan to write it over the holidays.
Noah Deia: I haven’t started the book, but I’ve finished the forty-eight page prologue.
Liam Malone: No, but I plan to start as soon as my kid (spouse/lover/mother) starts first-grade (high school/college/drinking (okay, so no one said drinking, but they should have)).
Otter Noah: I’m in no hurry, my book will write itself.
Identifying the specific traits
that make a non-writer is obviously easy.
Can we back into the making of a writer by applying the opposite? If so, a writer is committed, craft-savvy,
and disciplined.
In
conclusion, do we try to educate the non-committed masses who think writing a
book is easy? Or should we just cop out with a grin, a nod, and a “yeah, you really should write that book?
“
NOTE: Actual responses have
varied, but are only slightly exaggerated; names have been changed to protect
the ignorant, eh . . . I mean innocent.
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