I recently (and
privately) observed the fortieth anniversary of my occupation as a writer.
Earlier I had cooked, sold books, tended bar and pumped gas but for the rest of
my life I’ve been a pen for hire. I started as the editor of a weekly newspaper
in a small town in Northwestern Ohio. I’ve always had models in mind when
writing, which is not the same as influence or plagiarism. Guy Davenport
speculated that every book is a response to another book, whether or not the
writer is conscious of his motive. In those early days I kept in mind A.J.
Liebling and William Hazlitt. The latter’s essay “My First Acquaintance with Poets” was especially inspirational, as when he describes his younger self as “dumb,
inarticulate, helpless, like a worm by the way-side, crushed, bleeding lifeless
. . .”
It seems
significant that the first thing I wrote that was monetized – that is, for
which I was paid – was the obituary of a man named Miller. I’ve spent a lot of
time since then writing about dead people, who sometimes seem more substantial
and interesting than many of the living. Another sentence from Hazlitt’s essay now
reads prophetically:
“So I have
loitered my life away, reading books, looking at pictures, going to plays,
hearing, thinking, writing on what pleased me best.”
2 comments:
Alas, I too often find myself writing on what pleases me least; seemingly a fount that will ever flow.
"Guy Davenport speculated that every book is a response to another book, whether or not the writer is conscious of his motive."
Another motive which I found amusing:
"In an interview, [Michael] Ondaatje explained his desire to write, saying, "One of the things that happens in novels ... it's almost like a continual debate with yourself. That's why you're writing the book. It's why you create characters: so you can argue with yourself."
http://www.garrisonkeillor.com/radio/twa-the-writers-almanac-for-september-12-2019/
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