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Why I Write

July 7, 2008

I wish I could count the number of times well-meaning people (well, mostly well-meaning) have done the following:
  •  Handed me a magazine or newspaper article about how few writers actually make a living at writing.
  • Smiled patronizingly and gushed "Oh, that’s so noble! Especially when it’s so hard to make a living at it!"
  • Shaken their heads and said "There’s so many books out there. I've never met any writers. What makes you think you’re any good?"

I get this last from people who’ve never read a thing I’ve written. Their thinking seems to run thusly: Writers are serious, lofty types who don’t live anywhere around here. No one really knows them, except other lofty people who don’t live around here. You live around here, therefore, you can’t be a writer.

The Bretton Katt Alliance has been out for nearly a year now. I must confess it’s not exactly burning up any sales records, either for self-published books or books put out by major houses. I sell a copy this week, two the next. But the response from those few readers has been positive; they ask about the sequel, which gives me some small incentive to keep writing. The small incentive is important, because without it I might feel the urge to stop writing. And no writer can do that, whether you sell ten copies of your book or ten million.

Nobody writes to get rich, or even to pay the bills. (Dr. Johnson was in jest). It’s probably easier to bag a rich spouse-an option not open to me. People who write seriously do it because they can’t stop.

A few years ago, I was foolish enough to listen to people who kept hammering away at me about the pitfalls of the writing life. At that point most of the Lorrondons’ history was still in my head or in very jumbled notes. So I stopped writing and took a course in office management through the local community college. It was a good course, and I did learn some things-no schooling is ever wasted. But in trying to remake myself into something I wasn’t, I triggered a depressive episode that lasted for four years. It wasn’t until I began writing again that I finally pulled out of it. In another year I had the first complete draft of The Bretton Katt Alliance. Now I have the third book in the series close to completion.

I can no more stop writing than I can stop breathing. Writers always give this answer because it’s the only answer we can give. There is no scientific or practical explanation. By some weird cosmic joke, it’s just who we are.

Tags: bad advice, depression, the bretton katt alliance, writing


Posted at: 01:25 PM | Add Comment RSS

Kathy Flanary Nelson said...

Dear Margaret, Here, here, and thank you for outlining just a few, but very true dilemmas writers and authors face. I've had the same statements conveyed to me in different communicative forms, but in my town, they left out lofty because it is probably not part of their vocabulary. That sounds terribly bitter, I realize, and please let me add that I have a few fans around here that are very complimenting and supportive. Yes, writers may be beautiful dreamers but far from foolish ones. As you said so well, we write because we have to. Something tugs at our creative strings and without articulating our stories on paper those thoughts forever swirl, possibly abate for a while and then resurface to the forefront of our thoughts. Then as we plug away at our daily routine we know we are missing what we are supposed to do, and that is to deliver what we know deeply we have the power to do and that is to write. So, thank you for all of the wonderful information I’ve found in your blog, and yes again, we writers, published or not, must stick together. Best wishes, Kathy Flanary Nelson (author) Postscript: An addition to condescending comments: You hand someone your published book or 250 page manuscript and they say "Ah, you wrote a book", need I say more? Please also note that I appreciate very much every one who appreciated my work as a writer and author, not all are so insensitive to work and to talent.

Posted July 11, 2008 05:10 PM | Reply to this comment

Margaret Garside said...

Hey, Kathy, Sorry it's taken me so long to respond! It's great to know we're not alone, isn't it? There's a great community of writers on the Amazon forums. You get lots of good advice and just plain conradeship. I say we keep writing an ignore the hecklers. Time will tell us if our work is any good.

Posted August 13, 2008 04:04 PM | Reply to this comment

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