CATEGORY: The Novelist’s Due

Why I (erratically, unreliably, only occasionally) blog

I seldom blog.

At first, as I was wrapping up some novel writing, I thought blogging was a clever hook, a sure-fire way to lure potential readers toward my wares. Then I took a look around and realized there was an abundance of people meta-texting themselves all over cyberspace. No need to be a whisper amid a surfeit of noise, right?

(That, and was anybody really listening?)

So I took a hiatus from what was already an estimably poor blog posting schedule and focused on the re-write of my book.

Once I pulled my head out of that hole, it was time to dive into marketing and promotion. With all the urgency around social media and blogging, and the purported, inviolate necessity of being an avid social mediate in order to be deemed a worthy writer, it seemed I had no choice: Either fall into the folds of the blogosphere, Facebook and Twitter universii, or wither away into obscurity, the fruits of my labor withering along with my pride.

Naturally, my first thought was, Well shit… I’m a fiction writer, not a blogger. I intentionally didn’t go into journalism because I didn’t want to have to have a daily deadline for producing finished pieces. I need to labor over my words in a more self-indulgent way.

You’ve got to be joking

Gripe as I may, I’m generally a good sport. So I flew to Portland to spend the weekend with a friend who is in marketing. I ate her home-cooked food and drank an abundance of her wine, and I begged, “What am I supposed to blog about? How should I use Twitter? What is..? Why..? Whatever..? Will..?”

My friend shrugged and pointed me to some avid bloggers and tweeters that she liked.  So I investigated. I started following them. I checked out their blogs and Liked their Facebook pages. Some of them, I discovered, output more verbiage in a day than the meth addicts who roam the Tenderloin. (Trust me, it’s a compliment. Backhanded though it may sound.)

After a few months of being overwhelmed by the prodigious volume of other people’s postings, and of struggling to generate some lavishly banal postings about what it’s like to be a writer in the modern age, I called a graphic designer and brand consultant I know because now the talk was about how important social media was for reinforcing the writer’s BRAND.

Fabulous. Now I need bar codes.

In frustration, I took my designer friend to lunch and we drank some red wine. Many glasses of it. Had to. (I won’t mention the place because they have a really nice patio but a really weak pour. You have to drink twice as much to get an equal amount of bliss offered by other, more generous places.)

I lamented to my friend: “I’ve been tweeting. I’ve been blogging. I’m receiving no joy from any of this. And now, praise Madison Avenue, I’m expected to have a BRAND? I’ve just finished a novel and yet I feel like the literary equivalent of division by zero.”

My friend nodded her head sympathetically and talked a bit more about some of the visual imagery she might use to help brand me.

(Moo.)

Find your bliss…

On the matter of blogging, Anne R. Allen, a writer, summed up a writer’s ‘obligation’ to it well recently:  “Do what works for you.” She was also right in quoting Steve Jobs, who died recently: Life’s too short to live somebody else’s life. We often hear talk of ‘making peace’ with ourselves before we die. I think that’s overrated. We should be making peace with ourselves while we’re still healthy and very much alive. Like Steve did. He lived and did what he felt was right for him.

It sounds almost ludicrous to be philosophizing about social media, but as intertwined as our lives have become around it, there’s value in contemplating it. Possibly even in discussing it. Ultimately, though, a writer has to decide how to use (or not use) social media.  When and how and for what reason.

What sucks, in my opinion – and maybe this is completely self-imposed – is the notion that blogging must be a daily, rigorous and perpetual endeavor. I don’t have time for that. I don’t know how other people do. I have a day job. I have a novel to promote. I have other writing projects in varying states of progress. I have friends’ swimming pools to lie around. I’m not going to fabricate 500 words a day because of some theoretical obligation.

So I don’t. And I’ve stopped worrying about it.

One of the freest moments in my writing life was when I realized that I didn’t have to take time away from paying the rent and marketing my book in order to publish fabulously rich, alluring material into the blogosphere once a week or every day. No longer was I burdened with the idea that I had to cough up the equivalent of one novel-length book each year for free. Damn the promises made to my marketing friend in Portland; I wasn’t going to do it. I am a writer of fiction.

…and pull up a chair

My recently liberated philosophy on blogging is this: I blog because it allows me a platform to present my work – some facet of my work, a few carefully selected bits and tastes of my work. I have no expectation of bringing ten thousand ready and willing book buyers to a publisher’s table by virtue of the fact that I blog. However, if I should run into a reader, an agent or a publisher at a cocktail party… Should I arouse a bit of interest on their part… Well. Welcome in.

 

on the matter of motivation

Motivation – for doing things you do not love – is a stubborn little fucker that lives at the back of the barn.

How is it that for so many years we are willing to pay the price, to put up with it, to barter our lives away for it – to drag that beast out of the barn against its will, all the while smiling and telling ourselves it’s for a worthy cause…?

My sanity for a toothpick

This is the only way I can keep my desktop from rattling as I type or slog my mouse around as I do the work that pays my bills.

Who among us would rest their sanity upon a sliver of wood?

the toothpick that keeps my desktop from rattling

the toothpick that keeps my desktop from rattling

Slogging forward…

Of oil spills and shifting publishing paradigms

With BP’s oil still gushing into the waters of the Gulf of Mexico, there’s a metaphor aching to be used: I feel like a bird covered in muck.

word-nest-bird june 2010 (pelican: from Newsweek)

word-nest-bird june 2010 (pelican: from Newsweek)

Then, as I contemplate the catastrophic disgrace that is the oil spill, I recall that the struggle of a “new” writer in an era of shifting publishing paradigms is small potatoes when compared to the aching mess that humanity has wreaked upon its world again.

I’m troubled by the reminder that we’re the only species on the planet that shits in its own feeding bowl.

Making progress

2010 has been a year of slow progress. Much of the first half of the year has been taken up with paying the rent, although I did manage to complete the 2nd draft of Hugo. It’s had one reading so far; another is in progress; a third is pending.

The question, then, becomes what to do with it next. If the reading outcomes are as I expect, there will be a 3rd version – a lighter and much less extensive block of work than the 2nd version’s rewrite.

Hugo, 2nd draft - june 2010As Jane, the bunghole-pestering library scientist, tells Hugo after their random sexual encounter, “I suspect you’re layerable.”

Hugo is. And must be.

Unlike the tar-soaked pelican who yearns for lightness in order to be free, Hugo requires layers to give him meaning and weight. My hope is that with this one last layering – closing open loops, picking up story lines or characters that have dropped off and placing them gently back onto their shelf – I will be ready to pursue…the path.

Whatever that is.

The traditional publishing route? Unavailable, says the press. Online? Have to find a way to make it work. Self–?

And so it begins..

Had dinner with neighbors recently and I made mention that the easy part of writing a book is the writing part. Figuring out how to get it marketed, published and bought is going to be the difficult part.

deviant nature: jun 2010

deviant nature: jun 2010

I relish the challenge, though. Without challenge, the reward goes unappreciated. (So they say.) My lazy self wants it to be easy, though: isn’t 5 years enough of a commitment? Shouldn’t I be able to move on to what’s next? And who the hell pulled the rug out from under tradition anyway? (Fine now, shift the paradigm as soon as I’m ready to engage the old one.)

But then my compassionate self then remembers the pelican mired in muck, hopeful for another breath. Yearning to take flight.

My path isn’t that difficult. Nobody doused me. I have placed myself in the murky, churning waters at will.