Everybody has a dream. Something that they’d do if money
were no object, if they hadn’t made the life choices that they did, or if Kelly
Brooke hadn’t taken out that restraining order.
Some of us are fortunate to be able to live our dreams, and
mostly our lives turn out much for the better because of it. But everyone who’s
ever nodded off after watching a scary movie after an ill-advised late-night
cheese sandwich will know that not all dreams are good ones. Some turn out to
be nightmares.
They say that you should be careful what you wish for, and
some people most definitely dream dreams that are bad for them. Me? I dreamed of being a writer and due to circumstances
that were at least partly out of my control (though maybe asking my boss to
step outside a pub for a full and frank discussion on his managerial policies
wasn’t my finest ever moment) I can now live that dream.
Is it what I expected? Pretty much, yeah. Although there are
some things that weren’t in my gameplan. Even in my wildest dreams I knew that there would be a lot
of hard work, that I’d spend much of my time wracked with self-doubt, that my
mail would be mostly loads of rejections punctuated by the occasional
successful publication. But loneliness? No, I hadn’t planned on that one. I should
maybe have realised though that churning out a thousand words or so every day
is something that you can only do on your own and the more enthralled by it you
are, the more isolated you become, but I didn’t expect that I could go days on
end without talking to anyone, that I’d become so wrapped up in my work that I
don’t even realise that there’s an outside world to interact with.
I didn’t imagine that I’d start losing track of days either.
My Beloved keeps asking why I’m always asking her what day is it. It’s because,
from up here in my writing garret, they’re all the same. Wake, work, eat, sleep
– and dream of stories.
But you know what? Whatever the downsides, every day that I
spend writing is a heck of a lot better than being in a nine-to-five (and
sometimes well beyond) office. Having the freedom to do the work that I want,
when I want and being able to write wherever my imagination and my notebook
take me nothing short of magnificent. Especially on days when the sun is
shining.
Now I don’t know about where you are, but today is one of
those days. So you’ll have to excuse me – I’m logging off and going for a walk.
I’m working in the woods today.
© Shaun Finnie 2012
A weekly blog (mostly about writing) by Shaun Finnie, a struggling author from northern England.
Thursday, 26 July 2012
Friday, 20 July 2012
Ideas Man
‘Where do you get your ideas from?’
That must be the question that all authors across the years
have been asked more than any other. And like many other writers, it’s the
question that I have the most trouble answering. I have several stock
responses, but none of them seem to fit the bill…
·
‘I don’t really know, they just appear’. It’s a very
weak reply, and incredibly unimaginative for someone who allegedly makes a
living from their use of words. And it leaves the asker disappointed in the
answer and the writer giving it.
·
‘The story fairy delivers them to me’; ‘I steal
Dan Brown’s rejects’; ‘I buy them from a little shop in Rotherham’. These are
my standard flippant answers and sometimes they get a laugh, but they all avoid
the question and are disrespectful to the asker. If I give one of these answers
then I can usually expect a response of, ‘No, but really, where do you get them
from?’
·
‘I believe that there are stories floating all
around us, we just have to be attuned to them and let them flow through us.’
This one’s all a little bit California-new-age-hippy-tree-hugger-crystal-gazing-crap
for my liking. It’s also a guaranteed conversation killer.
So honestly, where do
ideas come from?
Well I can’t speak for other writers but for me… I make them
up. I think them into being inside my head. They might try to hide in the
faraway corners of my brain but I force them into the open by asking the most
important question any writer can possibly ask: ‘What if…?’
But that’s just the beginning, the start of the story if you
will. I’ll then take that fragile little germ of a story and work on it for
days, weeks, months, polishing every single word until their collective whole
is as good as I can make it. That’s what all authors do. That’s our job.
The best writers are the ones who can nurture these ideas in
such a way that the average reader thinks the process is so simple that anyone
could do it. And I firmly believe that anyone can have a great story idea, but
the dedication, the natural ability and the learned craft to make it worth
reading? That’s the difficult bit.
So a better question would be, ‘Which are the best ideas to
spend your time following up on?’
And if you have an answer to that one, my friend, you’ll
have taken your first steps on the way to a bestseller.
© Shaun Finnie 2012
Friday, 13 July 2012
The Public's Library
The internet has competition. There is another, long
neglected source of information available. Like the World Wide Web, it’s mostly
free and is an excellent source of entertainment and research, but it’s been
around much longer than any website.
It had been far too long since I’d set foot in my local
library. I’d simply lost the habit. Life, as they say, had got in the way. It’s
one of those things that you don’t do unless you make a special effort. So I
made that special effort, and I’m extremely glad that I did.
The slightly stuffy atmosphere that I remembered from my
youth was gone, replaced by a helpful, friendly ambience. The dark wood shelves
and heavy velvet drapes had been replaced too, by a light welcome airiness.
Most delightfully, I felt a return of the sense of wonder that visits to the
library had always conjured up in my youth. The endless possibilities held
within each book was still there, but now they had been joined by computer
terminals and data discs which, just like their paper cousins, were filled with
everything that an inquisitive mind might desire. The adventure, the horror,
the learning of the ages and so much more were still there to be rediscovered
by each generation just as I had done all those years ago. More information
than any one person could ever hope to learn was held within this building, a
living and growing thing available to anyone prepared to make the smallest of
efforts.
I was taken aback by the number of different uses that the
building has been given over to. Yes, it was predominantly a lending library,
but was also an art gallery and a coffee shop. It was a community centre with
the obligatory notice board advertising everything from poetry readings and
writing classes to jazz and dance festivals. There was even gentle soothing
music being piped in from somewhere, though never loud enough to be obtrusive.
The variety of people in the place was impressive too.
Middle-aged couples researching their family history, ladies in colourful robes
testing their English on each other, families looking for a film to go with a
pizza later and old men simply passing the time until the next bus home; all
were here, and yet nobody seemed out of place. Like a multi-faith church the
public library welcomed all, no questions asked, but with answers for everyone.
In the years of my absence the public library had become the public’s library.
So the next time I have research questions, or feel like
giving some new music a try, or simply fancy reading some escapist fantasy,
perhaps I should turn the laptop off. Maybe it’s time to rediscover my local
library.
© Shaun Finnie 2012
Friday, 6 July 2012
Grey, Grey, Grey (repeat 47 times)
They say that everyone has a book in them.
My standard reply to this has always been a flippant, ‘Yes,
but most people’s books would be unreadable’. You only have to look at some fan
fiction on the web to see that. Pick any film or TV show (or even Radio 4’s
‘The Archers’) that has a substantial following and likely as not there’ll be
some budding author online extending the official story in prose form – and
usually with some pornographic content thrown in for good measure (though
thankfully not in the case of ‘The Archers). It’s a nice idea – if you can
ignore the copyright infringement – that anyone can have a go at taking his or
her favourite characters into situations that the ‘official’ cannon won’t.
When ‘Snowqueens Icedragon’ posted ‘Master of the Universe’,
her erotic fan fiction based on characters from the ‘Twilight’ vampire saga,
she was basically just transcribing her own filthy daydreams. ‘This is my midlife crisis, writ large’, she says.
‘All my fantasies in there, and that's it’. Could she have imagined in
her wildest (and cleanest) dreams the success it would have when she removed
the copyrighted details, changed her pseudonym to E. L. James and rebadged her
work as ‘Fifty Shades of Grey’? It’s now become the UK’s fastest selling
paperback. Good luck to her and her many readers.
But the problem with most online fiction (and many
self-published ones) is the total lack of editorial control. Much of it is
simply dreadful. Happily though some of it’s good and some of it – like ‘Master
of the Universe’ – finds a niche market.
I’ve recently re-examined my views on this article’s initial
statement and I’m no longer sure that my default response to it is correct. I
don’t think I still believe that everyone has the ability to write a book,
whether a good or bad one. I’m not sure that everyone has the dedication. Sure, everyone could have the idea for a book, a one-off spark of inspiration – ‘ooh, that would
make a great plot for a novel’ – but to carry it through to completion? No, I
don’t think so.
One thing that E. L. James did that they (and I) have yet to
do? She finished what she started. She has three completed novels out there in
the market. I have none. I do though have half a dozen novels lying around in
various states of progress. My hard drive is currently a graveyard of dead and
dying novels. Some I still like, some I despise for having wasted so much of my
keyboard time. I’ve learned something from starting all of them, but sadly none
of them have taught me how place 100,000 words in a precise order that other
people could take an interest in and even recommend to their friends. Yet.
Anyway, that’s all I have time for this week. I must dash –
I’ve promised to complete my next self-published book by the end of the month.
© Shaun Finnie 2012
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