For a final question, I asked for Nancy Peacock's advice to beginning writers.
NP: There are two things I tell all beginning writers. They are my mantras and they carry me through every book I write. The first is "No one's going to do it for you." Meaning, if you want to write you're going to have to figure out how to fit it in with everything else you have to do, and everyone has things to do besides writing, even writers. The second mantra is "You can fix it later." Meaning, keep the story moving forward. Don't try to get page 1 perfect before moving on to page 2, and so on. Writing can be a very forgiving art if you understand that you have many passes at a particular story. For sure, get it as right as you can before you send it out, but know that this doesn't happen in one day.
And, yes, I've come to learn that both of these are true for me. Often when I'm on a roll with a story, I'll even skip words, leaving behind empty brackets because I know I need a dictionary or thesaurus, but I don't want to interfere with my progress. The best second "pass" for me becomes typing my first-draft handwritten scribble into a Word document.
But Nancy's first one, "No one's going to do it for you," is enough to get me back to the story right now.
Alex Kudera’s award-winning novel, Fight for Your Long Day (Atticus Books), was drafted in a walk-in closet during a summer in Seoul, South Korea. Auggie’s Revenge (Beating Windward Press) is his second novel. His numerous short stories include “Frade Killed Ellen” (Dutch Kills Press), “Bombing from Above” (Heavy Feather Review), and “A Thanksgiving” (Eclectica Magazine).
Showing posts with label A Broom of One's Own. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A Broom of One's Own. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 3, 2013
Monday, April 1, 2013
An Interview with Nancy Peacock, Part 2
Nancy Peacock and I continue our conversation related to her memoir about supporting herself by cleaning houses while writing and publishing novels. Here's one of many quotations I've appreciated from the book: "I think that in the beginning of my writing life I believed that writing, publication in particular, could, besides making me rich, also make me invulnerable. It might have been the stupidest thought I ever had, because there is nothing, with the exception of love, that has ever made me feel more vulnerable than writing and publishing."
I'm glad she adds publishing to that thought, the reminder that a couple poems or stories out and about online, or even a printed novel, doesn't relieve us of the vulnerability we feel as writers forging ahead, or falling behind, on some creative project or other.
In fact, though, in beautiful weather, at the South Carolina Botanical Garden, I had a chance to immerse myself in her memoir in the early evening, and, as a reader, I didn't feel vulnerable at all; rather, I enjoyed it very much.
But here are some of Nancy's additional thoughts from our interview.
NP: It depends on the book, but a first draft usually takes one year.
AK: Do you know many, or
any, successful novelists who also have full-time “careers” and children? Does
it seem like these are luxuries a contemporary American writer cannot afford or
the exclusive realm only of our few “rich and famous” writers?
AK: Stay tuned, as there is possibly a Part 3 on the way.
I'm glad she adds publishing to that thought, the reminder that a couple poems or stories out and about online, or even a printed novel, doesn't relieve us of the vulnerability we feel as writers forging ahead, or falling behind, on some creative project or other.
In fact, though, in beautiful weather, at the South Carolina Botanical Garden, I had a chance to immerse myself in her memoir in the early evening, and, as a reader, I didn't feel vulnerable at all; rather, I enjoyed it very much.
But here are some of Nancy's additional thoughts from our interview.
AK: Do you have regular
writing habits (for example, 7 a.m. to 11 a.m. five days a week) or do you work
your writing around your other obligations (your teaching or your
housecleaning, for example)?
NP: The only house I clean these days is my own, and I don't do that much.
But I do have to earn a living. I try to put my writing first. It helps that I
am naturally a morning person - so I get up early (5:30) and write for one or
two hours before anything else. If I am not working on a big project - a novel
or a book of essays - I tend to be more casual about it. But I love it when I
am working on a large project, and am keeping that early morning schedule.
AK: How long does it take you to compose a rough draft of a full manuscript?
NP: It depends on the book, but a first draft usually takes one year.
AK: How long does it take you from first rough sentence to final polished draft?
NP: Usually 2 to 3 years.
NP: Usually 2 to 3 years.
NP: Most of the writers I know also have jobs. Many are teachers at
universities, but I also know lawyers, tech writers, secretaries, counter help
at a garage, ministers, scientists, mothers, bartenders, etc. I live in an area
where you couldn't swing a cat without hitting a writer. But I also live in an
area which is very academic. I did feel pretty alone when I was cleaning houses
for a living - and although I've met writers who cleaned houses at some point
in their lives, I don't know of any who were doing it during the time their
books were being published.
AK: What are some of the
other more interesting writer's day jobs that you are aware of? In your
literary circles in North Carolina, how are writers surviving if they aren't
teaching school?
I always wanted to work several different jobs (knowing that each was
temporary) simply so I could write about them. I've named some jobs above. Some
of my own have been milker on a dairy farm, bartender, cocktail waitress,
carpenter, newspaper delivery, drum maker, costumer, exercise instructor, stall
mucker, locksmith, hardware store clerk, drugstore clerk, grocery clerk, baker,
and housecleaner of course. They were all interesting, and although I may have
hated some at the time, I always observed what each was like, and I could write
about any one of them.
AK: I have several friends
who are struggling in this economy, and I know of many others are having a hard
time of it. From your perspective, does it seem as if this “recession,” or
whatever we should call it, is any worse than what we’ve been through before as
a country?
NP: I think it's worse in that the culture seems a lot meaner now than in
the past. I think classism is much worse. I think there's very little respect
for hard work, and that too many folks assume that anyone who doesn't have a
desk job is not intelligent. But everyone is intelligent. Everyone has
something they are smart about. Most people have many things that they are
smart about. I think a lot of our problems could be lessened if only we
respected each other more.
AK: Stay tuned, as there is possibly a Part 3 on the way.
Sunday, March 31, 2013
An Interview with Nancy Peacock
Novelist Nancy Peacock was kind enough to respond to e-mailed questions related to her memoir on work and the writing life, A Broom of One's Own: Words on Writing, Housecleaning & Life. I'll post the first couple now and then the others in a future blog:
AK: Barbara Ehrenreich’s Nickle and Dimed: On (Not) Getting by in
America is one of the most famous contemporary works about how difficult it
can be for women to survive in America. It’s nonfiction of course, but I’m
wondering if you have any favorite, or even inspiring, books from the genre
(fiction or nonfiction not only about struggling in the “greatest country on
earth” but also struggling from a woman’s perspective)?
NP: I read Ehrenreich's book as about the working class, and not just about
women's survival. But in answer to your question - sort of - one of my favorite
books of all times is A Piece of Cake
by Cupcake Brown. Her story is about one woman's survival from homelessness to
becoming a lawyer. It's a great read. I don't think this answer is really to
the point of your question (I'm having trouble thinking of books specific to
that) but it's a chance to plug Cupcake Brown's book. Really - read it. So many
of the memoirs I've read had to do with dysfunctional families and sexual abuse
rather than with society as a whole.
AK: Is Virginia Woolf’s
classic, A Room of One’s Own important to you? Are there other classics with
similar themes that you see as influences?
NP: I certainly played off of the title A
Room of One's Own - A Broom of One's
Own. I think that women have more trouble finding time, quiet, physical
space, and psychic space for writing, but I think we all need it. In my own
life I have, as I've grown older, found it easier to get this for myself,
probably because I recognize the importance of it more now than I did when I
was younger, and because I am more willing to take it without apology.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
Featured Post
Book Reviews for Fight for Your Long Day
W.D. Clarke's Blog " Fight for Your Long Day, by Alex Kudera " by W.D. Clarke (January 13, 2025) Genealogies of Modernity ...
-
Iain Levison's Dog Eats Dog was published in October, 2008 by Bitter Lemon Press and his even newer novel How to Rob an Armored Car ...
-
Book Reviews: "The Teaching Life as a House of Troubles," by Don Riggs, American, British and Canadian Studies , June 1, 2017 ...
-
In theory, a book isn't alive unless it's snuggled comfortably in the reading bin in the bathroom at Oprah's or any sitting Pres...
-
Beating Windward Press to Publish Alex Kudera’s Tragicomic Novel Illustrating Precarious Times for College Adjuncts and Contract-Wage Ame...
-
W.D. Clarke's Blog " Fight for Your Long Day, by Alex Kudera " by W.D. Clarke (January 13, 2025) Genealogies of Modernity ...