Writing fiction: crawl until your knees hurt

As a rule, humans are impatient. It’s in our nature. We don’t want things later on; we want them now. Like, right now. If we join a karate class, we want the sensei to stop the lesson halfway through, come over to us with their jaw sagging like a shopping bag, tell us they’ve never seen anything like it and bump us straight up to a brown belt. Of course, things like that rarely happen. A wunderkind is called a wunderkind because what they’re doing is nothing short of a miracle. The rest of us Beta-Minuses have to grind away at the things we want to become good at day after day, year after year, until eventually somebody does come up to us and tell us how good we are—and by that time we won’t even believe them, because now we’re deep, deep into it, and we’re aware there is so much we don’t (and will never) know.

 

If patience is a virtue, then writers are sinners. I didn’t have any patience when I started writing. I thought that by making the decision to write like a maniac each day, I’d be rewarded for my discipline within, say, six months at the maximum. Having a couple of short stories published in semi-professional journals was my goal, along with a semi-finished version of my first novel (a kind of Last Exit to Brooklyn palimpsest that makes every mistake and misstep imaginable). How impetuous that guy was. He jumped out of the blocks, arms swishing back and forth, legs pumping like mighty pistons, one eye on the finish line all the way over there in the distance, another on the crowd he was sure was in attendance just for him. And for a few sweet ignorant strides, everything was perfect. But before long he realised he was coming no closer to the finish line. He was, in effect, running on the spot. All that energy, all that sweat, all those winks to the crowd. For nothing. No publications. No interest. No glory.

 

So I stopped running and did what I should have done in the first place: I fell to my knees and started to crawl. I jettisoned all my preconceptions, stopped thinking recognition was owed to me, and turned my back on the concept of glory (a terrible reason to ever do anything anyway). I wrote for months and months and months, churning out terrible short stories and working on a second novel. The skin on my knees rubbed away and became bloody. Gravel became embedded in the palms of my hands. My back ached. I spent countless few evenings wondering whether it was worth it. And then, a year later, I had a piece accepted for publication. Five hundred words buried somewhere in an online-only zine. The most modest of modest triumphs. But it was enough. And as I continued crawling, I realised a few things: the skin on my knees had healed. My back didn’t hurt as much. My hands relished the gravel that bit deep into the meat below my thumbs. I kind of liked being down there on the floor.

 

Now, it’s not easy to remain on the ground. But there are three things you could do to make the experience less painful from the start:

 

1.    Don’t tell anyone you’re writing a novel.

I did the opposite of this. I told family, I told friends, I told anybody who would listen. They questioned me, shouted words of encouragement, laughed, told me they’d ‘definitely buy it’ once the novel came out (because all you have to do is write it, yeah?). Those family members and friends told other people—strangers at parties, in bars and at gatherings, usually when the conversation hit a lull—and there’d be more questions and encouragement and smirking. At some point I found myself thinking that if I failed to produce a freshly bound masterpiece with a foreword by Irvine Welsh and multiple glowing reviews soon, all those people would call me a fraud. Which is bullshit, obviously. The only person who cares what you’re doing is you (and to a lesser extent your partner if you have one, and that’s 80% out of a sense of duty). Your friends don’t care, your family doesn’t care, and the strangers definitely don’t care. They might clap you on the back and grin and cause you to bow your head and stare at the tabletop while the twin flames of pride and embarrassment singe your cheeks, but they’re not thinking of you while you’re battering the hell out of your keyboard or making a breakthrough with a character you’ve hated up to now or sitting in a bath of lukewarm water telling yourself over and over that you’re worthless. They have their own stuff going on. Your drama is a solo performance. Unless you’re George R.R. Martin (or Stephen King when he was writing The Dark Tower), nobody is desperately expecting anything from you. But if you don’t want to feel like they do, stop telling people you’re writing a novel.

 

2.    Give yourself time.

Yeah, it’d be nice to have the same luck as Brett Easton Ellis or Francois Sagan or S.E. Hinton and find an agent and a contract with a publishing house when you’re still in your teens. And it is luck, regardless of how good the writing is. Exactly the right person has to see your words on the page at exactly the right time in their life, in the lives of the prospective audience and in the life of the publishing house that agrees to take a chance on it. Those are some star-aligning odds. What most of us simply have to do is give ourselves time. Time to make every mistake, take dramatic U-turns, leave the manuscript to one side for months at a time, churn out short story after short story until you finally happen upon an idea that is not a dead loss, one that glows, one that—in time—you can tease and turn into a living, breathing piece of readable fiction. Also: Think twice before sending off your query letters to agents. Is it genuinely the right time to do it? Have you actually spent long enough on your art or are you inflating those seven months of graft into something greater? Have you cut any corners along the way? Did you rush that last draft a bit because you just wanted to get it finished? Is your belief in yourself justified or unrealistic? If any of the answers are negative, it would be wise to bury that manuscript for a few more weeks (before giving it another read-through), close that query template file and stop trawling the agencies and publishing houses. They’ll (probably) still be there when you’re actually ready.

 

3.    Don’t be so quick to throw it out there on Kindle.

There are thousands of articles on how the publishing industry has changed and how self-publishing is fashionable, wise and lucrative, all at once. That’s great if you’ve written 18 fantasy novels in the past two years or you’re good at tapping into the werewolf shifter erotica market. But I have the suspicion that self-publishing isn’t actually quite as attractive as people make it out to be. I have another suspicion that most writers would probably chop off a limb to get a traditional contract with a publishing house, but wouldn’t go so far as to cut their hair if self-publishing required it. I wrote an ugly little book with literary aspirations and when I wasn’t able to find an agent I slapped a cover together and put it on Amazon. That, in itself, felt like a failure. I then spent the next six months or so doing virtually nothing to promote it. What I did do every day was look at the book sales and watch how I sold fourteen copies, then five copies, then two copies...one copy...one more...flatline. A few encouraging reviews from friends, but little beyond that. And why should I have expected anything different? I didn’t spend long enough on it and it wasn’t good enough to attract attention, but I was deluded enough to think it would somehow find a cult audience in, I don’t know, Detroit or Calcutta or Tangier. All I managed to do was use up some goodwill among friends by pestering them to buy the book and waste the time of those agents who actually went so far as to read my query letters. Impatience controlled my actions entirely. Instead of crawling along, getting somewhere, I was out of breath miles from the finish line. And that neither feels nor looks good.

 

So those are the three rules I wish I’d known back at the start of all this. I’m now in my fourth year of being a ‘professional’, as Steven Pressfield refers to it, which is no time at all. And yet I’m writing a blog post about writing. The reason is because I know now that it’s okay to crawl and it’s where I belong, and that gives me the confidence to believe in what I’m writing. Above all, I’m no longer gripped by impatience. There’s no reward for finishing quickly. There are no short cuts. Writing takes as long as it takes, and that’s that.

SELF, SELF, SELF

midnight in a perfect world

midnight in a perfect world

Chart / January

I don’t listen to music while writing. It’s too distracting. But it’s good for getting into the right mood just before starting. While writing By the Feet of Men, for example, I listened to a lot of Boards of Canada and Tangerine Dream because it’s coldwarm and apocalyptic with a touch of hope. During the long, tortured sessions for Static Age, my failed sketch of toxic masculinity, it was mainly Queens of the Stone Age’s first album, Misfits and Minutemen. Rock and/or roll.

Here’s what’s tugging on my aurals in this poured-concrete January:

  1. Yves Tumour feat. Croatian Amor - Economy of Freedom

  2. Radiohead - Ill Wind

  3. Chrome Sparks - Juno Lion

  4. Ty Segall - Alta

  5. Jeff Tweedy - The Red Brick

  6. Sons of Kemet - My Queen is Anna Julia Cooper

  7. Pye Corner Audio - Deep Space Probe

  8. Lara Sarkissian - Tell Me, Where Do the Butterflies Live

  9. Low - Dancing and Blood

  10. Ichiko Aoba - テリフリアメ

hey Sputnik.

hey Sputnik.

Juggling a Job and Writing Fiction

When I quit my job as an in-house translator to write fiction full time, I went to my tax advisor and grandly announced to her that I was going to do the minimum amount of freelancing to get by and spend the rest of my days writing a novel. I didn’t care about making money anymore and I wouldn’t take any work that impacted on my writing schedule. After all, I’d found my true calling. The art was the only thing that mattered, just like Steven Pressfield spelled out in The War of Art. Eyes moist with triumph, I concluded my little speech by telling my tax advisor—a German with the pragmatic Weltanschauung of the Iron Frau—that she could expect a massive drop in my earnings over the next year. Her response was a Teutonic kick in the Weichteile: ‘We’ll see.’

Turns out she was right. Obviously. There was no massive drop in income. I didn’t turn down paying work because of my burning desire to create art. I still needed and cared about money. At first, it bothered me to realise I didn’t have the strength to turn my back on the established order, to cut the safety net emblazoned with a dollar sign. But the reality is this: the starving artist trope is a myth. Unless you’re Knut Hamsun or George Orwell and you’re able to weave a harrowing narrative out of a man’s quest to starve himself to death as an act of spite toward the world, nobody is impressed that you can’t afford to eat properly or that you’ve had to sell your Sonos speaker to a mate to buy cigarettes and red wine (props that you put on your desk for when a friend comes over and asks you how the writing is going. You don’t even answer the question; you simply nod at the desk and sigh). If you don’t have two coins to rub together, you can’t buy books or travel or sit in a bar with a friend and talk and observe – all experiences essential for enriching your writing.

And so, like the majority of fiction writers, I had to learn a new skill: how to juggle. That is, the ability to do a sufficient amount of work in a day to earn enough money to be privately sufficient while keeping the minimum number of hours free for writing. The problem was I couldn’t find many articles detailing the best way—or even how—to do it. There are plenty of guides for tyros on how many words to write in a session, when to edit, how often to write, and so on. And there are hundreds of interviews with established writers on how they structure their day (like Murakami the cyborg jazz hound who gets up at 4 am). But not so much on flinging balls in the air and trying to catch them again. So with that in mind, here are five things I’ve learned about juggling work and writing.

 Note: These tips do sort of fall apart entirely when children are added into the equation. Then again, people who manage to juggle a job and kids and writing are superhuman and they don’t need advice.

1.    Make the hours count.

As a day-jobber and a writer, every hour is like a Tetris piece falling too fast from the sky. It’s up to you to match what you’re doing with the hours that you’re given, even if you feel like you want to ignore what you’re supposed to be doing in favour of firing up the YouTube. If you lose even half an hour somewhere, you’ll have to make it up elsewhere – and that elsewhere is your writing time. The more you dick about at work and eat into your writing time, the worse you’ll feel when you arrive home at 7 or 8 pm and only manage to turn out 300 words before retreating to the sofa with a bowl of overcooked spaghetti and pesto and the nuclear glow of Netflix rouging your pasty skin. You want to feel like you’ve earned that terrible food and bad sitcom, don’t you? Make every hour count.

2.    Routine is king.

The best way to make the hours count is by establishing a routine. When you have a routine, you can save the energy otherwise expended on organising your day. Whether before work, after work or during your lunch break, find an unbroken time window whose glass is strong enough to withstand outside influences. For me, that means working from 8 am until 1 pm, doing sport/having lunch for an hour, working from 2 pm until 4 pm and then writing from 4 pm until 6 pm or 7 pm. Once you’re into your session, don’t break it for anything if possible. Not for more work, not for phone calls, not for emails. Keep your mind clear of vocational clutter and power through. It’s only a couple of hours, three at the most. Attack that page. You’ll feel great at the end of it. And the next day you’ll go into work and have something to share during your coffee break. “I wrote something last night,” you’ll say, the words half-directed at the floor out of a sense of false modesty. “Oh yeah?” says the only person in the office whose voice doesn’t have you reaching for the noise-cancelling headphones. “What’s it about?” And you’ll grin and say, “I can’t tell you because it’s not done yet. That’s a rule.” They’ll nod and walk away, and you’ll be left to think about what you’re going to write tonight.

3.    But you can break the routine if you need to.

“If you don’t write every day without fail, you’re not a real writer.” It turns out this isn’t true. Harper Lee wrote a grand total of one book (I’m not counting miserable first drafts not intended for publication). She was a writer and perhaps the best example of quality over quantity ever. Now, this isn’t to say that it’s fine to sit down and mash out 300 words once a week. As stated, it’s important to develop a routine and stick to it. It keeps the cogs greased, Pavlovs you into a creative mindset, stops the excuses from lining up like lemmings on the tip of your tongue. But if you miss a day or two because you took on too much work and you’re exhausted, there’s no need to flagellate yourself. All you’ve done is identify a boundary, and each time you overstep it, it’ll become a little more concrete in your mind until finally you know exactly how much work you can do before it impacts on your writing time. So in a way you have to break from your routine from time to time if you’re going to follow it on the whole. The same goes for if you have visitors or a friend is begging to spend time with you: if you’re going to commit to them, do it properly. Don’t have half a mind on writing while you’re with them. Take the break and enjoy it and return to the desk renewed (and maybe with some inspiration) the next day.

4.    If possible, freelance.

Do you care about your job as much as you care about writing? Would you miss the office environment? Do you have skills you can sell to people for money without having to turn up in the same place day after day? If so, become a freelancer. Freelancing is the future. Publications keep proclaiming it, so it must be true. Oh sure, it’s lonely, there’s a lack of financial security, you’ll definitely have to work weekends and you often feel like you’re thumping your forehead against the cold, hard bark of the forest of stupidity, but it has its perks, too. Being able to choose your own hours, for example (good for building your routine). Finding yourself with a whole sweet afternoon free, a mug of tea in your hand and a blank page before you. Or landing that one plum assignment worth enough so that you can take four days off at the end of the month and go out and gather new experiences.

5.    If work has put you in a bad mood, edit.

Here’s the scenario: you’ve spent most of the day working flat out on a project to meet a deadline, only for your boss or the customer to tell you your efforts weren’t necessary. The project has been postponed, perhaps. Or they’re going to go with a different version. Or the person who is supposed to sign off on it is on holiday. Whatever the case, you’re tired, jaded and in no mood to accept anybody’s bullshit—least of all your own. That’s why it’s the perfect time to read through a short story, a poem or a novel that you’ve been working on. You’ll immediately see the places where you’ve been too cute and where you’ve tried to cut corners. You’ll sneer at clunky dialogue, sigh at the winded pacing, shake your head at characters more uneven than the Tacoma Narrows Bridge. You might even hear a voice telling you that you’re worthless and shouldn’t be a writer. Don’t listen to them, though. They’re just tired and cranky, too. The focus is on using your irascibility to your benefit, not your detriment. So wield the scalpel. Cut and slash. Be as ruthless as you like. The next day, when you’re (hopefully) feeling better about yourself and the world again, you’ll come back to your text and gasp at the all-new beast before you: it’s so lean, so clean, so mean. Feel that new pep and vim in your blood as your fingers machine-gun the keyboard. And use it to create something amazing.

CAN THIS BE

Typewriter.jpg

Here / Now

Hello.

According to Chapter 9, Section 3, Subsection 4 of the Orwellian manual my publisher sent to me, I’m supposed to have my own website because author branding + targeted content + follower base = sales. I am reminded of the great Bill Hicks rant.

This is what I have so far:

Links to my novels (the real one and the not real one) / Links to my short stories / An about page written as though somebody that wasn’t me wrote it (I wrote it) / a blog.

I’ll be adding and tweaking as I go along (at least until pressing real-life issues like the sixth mass extinction event make me wonder why I’m bothering to do this when I should be learning skills like agroforestry or how to kill).

Do check in here from time to time. There’ll be thoughts.

Amo Bishop Roden.

IMG_7858.jpg