Blog from Writer and CW Teacher Alex Keegan. Also publishes news from Boot Camp Keegan and Writing Competition Schedules and Results. FACEBOOK ME!
Thursday, February 02, 2006
1,700 Words an Hour?
February has started with a flurry of submissions, but the writing is very ho-hum.
I feel empty of fresh, worthwhile stuff. Oh, I could bang out 1K Flashes that'd be "OK" but I have them coming out of my ears. What I need is a bit more serious stuff, strong enough to pitch for Fish, Bridport or a few of the US comps, and of course New Yorker, Paris Review, Glimmer Train et al.
I also promised my downtrodden spouse that I WOULD finish one of the novels before August.
I'd do that, no problem if it wasn't for school-runs and stuff. The SR used to be best part of an hour and I've got it down to half that but that is still 5 Hours a week simply zapped. Add in two weekdays with an extra hour and one where it's three and that is a full eight-hour working day taken from me every single week.
This morning, pre-log I wrote 2,550 words in 88 minutes, 1,700 an hour. Those eight hours could be 13,600 words IN A WEEK!
of course, there's the small problem of making them GOOD.
I say above that the school-run is "wasted". And that's a serious thought. But for the course I ran in Wales I looked at one school-run and produced an article "Writing While Driving is Legal".
I was basically reminding myself how much there is to see if only we would LOOK.
Nice segue here to something with the Open University. I was asked to look at a Rembrandt painting (The Artist in His Studio) and write about it. Just "looking" it's an OK painting and I like the colour etc. Having to write down what I see and start to "interact" I kept seeing more and more and more.
I have no idea if I was imposing meaning (watch this space) but the process reminded me of my blind-spots reading poetry and the hundreds of BCers who take years to "see" short-stories.
We were just discussing a story in BC, "Genteel Potatoes" by A L Kennedy
Discussion in 99% of writers sites are loose and general, powder puff and unpindownable. This one started the same:
Great read, I would think 130 (referring to a BC score)
Pleased you liked it. I thought 140.
I came in and bawled a few people out, that we CRITIQUE in Boot Camp, not chatter. The first three crits came in with scores of 118-120. That's interesting in itself. My view was that the story was OK, but mostly presentation covering up a very small plot with a stock theme.
The point is (and 120 is a very good score, just not "The Ledge") that proper critiquing made people see a lot clearer and learn something instead of just nodding at a story because the author is a name.
Potatoes seems to be a recurring theme recently. We had a BC story where a woman was peeling spuds, then this one, and yesterday I had to read a Seamus Heaney poem about the author peeling potatoes with his mother.
If you're interested Seamus, I got that one.
Alex
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1 comment:
and that in trun reminds me of Yorkshire-based painter Neil Simone
http://www.thepictureshop.co.uk/artist.php/cat/285
I have a few of his prints and one original
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