As I writer, I’m always curious about how other writers write. And much of what I’ve read on this subject is daunting: write every day, write even when you don’t feel like it, write first thing in the morning when your energies are at their peak, etc. Hemingway was a great proponent of early morning writing, starting at six, and even Stephen King’s excellent thoughts in On Writing are a bit daunting:
“Like your bedroom, your writing room should be private, a place where you go to dream. Your schedule–in at about the same time every day, out when your thousand words are on paper or disk–exists in order to habituate yourself, to make yourself ready to dream just as you make yourself ready to sleep by going to bed at roughly the same time each night and following the same ritual as you go.”
Being a stay-at-home, teach-my-children-their-school mom doesn’t always permit this sort of schedule (especially during things like the A-Z challenge). There are days I don’t write. There are times I just edit. There are weeks when I don’t even touch my works-in-progress, and I’ve always wondered whether that made me a “bad writer.”
And then I read Daily Rituals: How Artists Work by Mason Currey. He looks at 161 different kinds of artists–musicians, choreographers, writers, painters–and examines how they created their work. What their daily schedule looked like, and what was remarkably freeing was the variety.
Anthony Trollope (one of my many favorite writers) was an early writer, since he had a full-time job with the post office. He wrote at 5:30 in the morning and wrote for three hours, but he admits the whole time wasn’t devoted to writing. “I always began my task by reading the work of the day before, an operation which would take me half an hour, and which consisted chiefly in weighing with my ear the sound of the words and phrases.” His goal was 1,000 words an hour, though, which makes him worse than King in terms of expectations.
Jane Austen didn’t tackle her writing until after breakfast. “Austen rose early, before the other women were up, and played the piano. At 9:00 she organized the family breakfast, her one major piece of household work. Then she settled down to write in the sitting room, often with her mother and sister sewing quietly nearby. If visitors showed up, she would hide her papers and join in the sewing.” Apparently, there was a swing door that visitors had to go through to reach the sitting room, and Jane preferred to keep that door in a creaky state, so she’d have notice when anyone was coming.
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Contrary to Trollope and all the “early riser” crowd, Gustave Flaubert was a night owl. He “established a strict routine that allowed him to write for several hours each night–he was easily distracted by noises in the daytime.” His schedule began at 10 in the morning, but he didn’t touch his work until 9 or 10 at night, spending the rest of the day eating, walking, giving a lesson to his niece, and having family interactions (talking to his mother, reading, etc.). And his progress was slow. At one point, he complained that “[Madame] Bovary is not exactly racing along: two pages in a week! Sometimes I’m so discouraged I could jump out a window.” (And I’m sure the content of the novel didn’t help, as the protagonist spends a good deal of time being discouraged and unhappy herself.)
Gertrude Stein‘s ritual was rather amusing. Her companion, Alice B. Toklas, handled the household work so Stein could write. After leaving Paris during the outbreak of WWII, they lived in a country home, and Stein preferred to write outside. A New Yorker article described how this played out: “Miss Stein likes to look at rocks and cows in the intervals of her writing. The two ladies drive around in their Ford till they come to a good spot. Then Miss Stein gets out and sits on a campstool with pencil and pad, and Miss Toklas fearlessly switches a cow into her line of vision. If the cow doesn’t seem to fit in with Miss Stein’s mood, the ladies get into the car and drive on to another cow.” Her autobiography confirmed that she never really wrote much more than half an hour a day, but stated “If you write a half hour a day it makes a lot of writing year by year. To be sure all day and every day you are waiting around to write that half hour a day.”
I also enjoyed Francine Prose‘s thoughts on writing: “I write whenever I’m able, for a few days or a week or a month if I can get the time. i sneak way to the country and work on a computer that’s not connected to the Internet and count on the world to go away long enough for me to get a few words down on paper, whenever and however I can. When the writing is going well, I can work all day. When it’s not, I spend a lot of time gardening and standing in front of the refrigerator.”
Overall, the book is a gem and I’d highly recommend it to anyone. Most writing books talk about how to write rather than examining what writers did and how they lived on a day-to-day basis, and this book fills in the gap, letting us in on their secrets. There were artists I’d never heard of, but it was a fun read all the same, and a great encouragement on the creative process. It reveals just how diverse people are, reminding us that even though they wrote at different times and in different ways, they still produced excellent works, admired and read by many.
This guest post was contributed by Andrea Lundgren. Andrea enjoys books and all things writing–from how we write to why we write–and her blog explores things from a writer’s point of view.
When I was homeschooling my don, I ran into the same problems. I wrote when I could. That was not always every day at the same time. Even now, there are so many things going on in my life. I do not always have time time write every day. Although, I do try to. As long as, you are writing, you are a good writer. Just my thoughts.
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All the while I’m thinking, if Jane Austen woke up before the others and played the piano, did she wake them up? Or did she just have a humongous house? Great post as usual. Thanks for sharing!
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Writing is work, but some should be writers because they have something to contribute to the masses. I write, because I can write short posts, or long ones. The blog keeps what I write, and I spill out what is going on in my world. I value audience silence, or participation. I just have this need to communicate to someone, and I choose through writing. Yes, I have a family, but writing is letting go and saying hello to the world.
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I came across your blog again. I believe the topic here is wonderful. Just observing. You have grossed a wider audience, yet your writing style is drawing people in to read what we are talking about now. Keep up the good work.
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very interesting but I am finding more and more I need a completely separate area.
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Reblogged this on The Reluctant Poet.
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What I do is commit a day in advance to X-number of writing hours — deep-focus hours, with no digital distractions — and then at the end of the day, I acknowledge that I fulfilled my commitment. By reserving time for myself every day to write — sometimes only an hour, sometimes as many as four hours — I’ve learned to judge myself on behavior rather than content (meaning the quantity/quality of the pages produced); I make a commitment to write, I fulfill that commitment, and the other hours of the day are mine to spend as I like. It beats the all-or-nothing approach that was stressing me out and in no way conducive to productivity.
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Very insightful blog. Each person has their own style & wonderful to learn for ones aspiring to write. Thanks for sharing!
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