I’m stealing this as my manifesto:
Step One: Wonder about something.
Step Two: Invite others to wonder with me.
Stolen from Auston Kleon’s book, Steal Like an Artist, 10 things nobody told you about being creative.
That man is brilliant.
I came across his small book, free yesterday on Amazon Prime, and I read it before lunch.
“You don’t need to be a genius, you just need
to be yourself,” he wrote.
I slapped my head and declared,
“Thank you, God,”
(Thank you Auston Kleon. I don’t
know if God had anything to do with that statement.)
I know I have bounced all over the
place with subjects—metaphysics, the spiritual path, life blog, travel, writing
about writing, writing about blogging, chickens, animals, horses, home life,
family, story, Hawaii, Oregon, and
California, I’ll even throw in sea life if that strikes me. And then I hear the
voice of the blogging gurus who say to
find your niche and stick with it.
I scream, “WHAT’S MY NICHE!”
Kleon says, ”You can cut off a couple of passions and only focus on one, but after awhile,
you’ll start to feel phantom limb pain.”
I love this man.
“Do not leave your longings
unattended.”
Right on.
Yesterday I began
the day deciding that I would write something about writing for I saw that I
have a few readers on my blog “The Best Damn Writer Blogger on the Block.”
(Fair to say, I’m the only one writing one, maybe I should check my city block
to see if there are any other bloggers writing about writing.) http://www.thebestdamnwritersblog.com
I don’t know how those readers found
me, for nine chances out of ten
I can’t find it myself. (Maybe it’s the damn in the title, or my firewall,
something.) However, if someone shows up, I am happy to
offer them something.
Except that
yesterday I had
nothing to say.
Blogs are supposed
to add something of value. So, where did that leave me?
With Zilch. Nada.
Kleon to the
rescue, “If you try to devour the history of your discipline all at once,
you’ll choke.”
Okay, back to the
beginning of the day. I figured Hemingway was a good place to start. However, Hemingway was
reluctant to talk of writing for he felt that saying too much might inhabit his
muse.
And although Hemingway was known for his adventurous spirit, first and
foremost he was a writer. He might have been reluctant to talk of writing, but over
the years at different times, to different people, in varied parts of the
world, he commented about it in letters and stories.
Along came Larry W.
Phillips who ferreted out Hemingway's comments regarding writing and placed
them in a book called Ernest Hemingway on
Writing."
“All good books are
alike,” wrote Hemingway, “in that they are truer than if they had really
happened, and after you are finished reading one you will feel that all that
happened to you and afterward all belongs to you; the good and the bad, the
remorse and sorrow, the people and the places and how the weather was.”
–By-Line Earnest Hemingway pg 184.
This quote explains
why my eyes cross when I hear people say, “I only read non-fiction.” As though
fiction is frivolous and they are into “serious” learning.
Quite the opposite
is true. Good fiction writers can hit you with a truth when you don’t even know
you’ve been hit.
There’s a place for
both, hey, for all my touting of fiction, I have a non-fiction book coming out
May 17, 2019.
And lest I get too
excited about this opportunity, today I got slapped on the side of the
face, for I received three, not one, not two, but THREE rejection letters. I
had figured if it takes two years for a book to come out I better get cracking.
Back to the drawing
board.
And write
whatever’s itching to come out.
Two secrets from
Hemingway:
“The secret is that
it is poetry written into prose and that is the hardest thing to do.” --From
Mary Hemingway
“Then there
is the other secret. There isn’t any symbolysm (misspelled). The sea is the
sea. The old man is an old man. The boy is a boy, and the fish is a fish. The
shark are all sharks no better and no worse. All the symbolism that people say
is shit. What goes beyond is what you see beyond when you know.” Hemingway to
Bernard Berenson, 1952
I beg to
differ. The Old Man and the Sea says
a lot about Hemingway—symbolism or not.
Hemingway
left a lot unsaid. He wrote simply, quite against the flowery prose of his day.
His style was considered the iceberg effect, that is much was beneath the
surface.
Okay, back to
Steal Like an Artist:
“We’re
talking about practice, not plagiarism. Plagiarism is trying to pass someone’s
else’s work off as your own. Copying is about reverse engineering. It’s like a
mechanic taking apart a car to see how it works.”
If you steal from
one author its plagiarism, but if you copy from many, it’s reverse engineering,
Gary Panter says, If you rip off a hundred people will say, “You’re so
original.”
One is
copying.
One hundred
is research.
I believe the
following (from Kleon) applies not only to artists but to anyone starting a
business:
You will need:
- Curiosity
- Kindness
- Stamina
- A willingness to look stupid.
Barbara Kingsolver in her last tip
of five on writing said, “If you are young and a smoker, you should quit.”
I qualify as a writer, I don't smoke and I'm not young.