The Tortured Bloggers Department

Taylor and Travis are getting married. Everyone is talking about this. Now I must, too.

Travis, of course, plays football, which immediately makes him of zero interest to me. Also, no character in a book, film, or song will ever be named Travis. Yuck. Imagine these famous lines with his name:

Travis, can you hear me?

You’ll have to think for both of us, Travis.

Tell me about the rabbits, Travis.

Travis Jones, I always knew someday you’d come walking back through my door.

[Whispered before dying:] Travis!

With Travis out of the way I can discuss Taylor. I recently learned that two men of my acquaintance are Swifties. I will call them Swifty 1 and Swifty 2. Swifty 1 is an internationally recognized expert on Bruce Springsteen. Swifty 2, when we lived in the same city, was in my face every day with his love for Hungarian composer Béla Bartók, plus he could catch anything hit to him in center field. Both men are devoted to Taylor, despite the fact that each of them was already a walking, talking, go-to-work-every-day adult in his 30s when Taylor was born.

Obviously, I’m missing something. Also, my wife says I’m being a grump, or just stupid, for ignoring her. And my wife is not Swifty 3. So let’s move on to Taylor and writing, because people already have, as in this workshop, “Write Like a Popstar.”

Continuing the discussion I began in our last, very exciting post, I will quickly mention a few more writing books because I believe they can help you. Just don’t get bogged down in them and forget to write. You can be sure that Taylor and Travis read these books to each other on their date nights.

In my first post, back in 2016, I wrote about Jessica Page Morrell’s Thanks, But This Isn’t for Us: A (Sort Of) Compassionate Guide to Why Your Writing Is Being Rejected. I stand by these thoughts.

You can’t go wrong with Stephen King’s On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft, and I guess that proves I’m not a grump, O my wife, because I really resisted reading this thing. The overall tone is ornery; King wrote a chunk of it while he was in terrible pain from being run down by a van in the middle of the night. But the book came along at the right time for me. I felt as if Stephen King were giving me permission to write again following a lengthy silence.

Elizabeth Benedict’s The Joy of Writing Sex (good sex scenes should always be about sex and something else) is enlightening and fun to read. It was published in 1996, when Taylor was listening to Britney and Travis was playing T-ball, but sex is still sex.

I’m not going to tell you that Bruce Holland Rogers will always be helpful in Word Work: Surviving and Thriving as a Writer, but he’ll always be friendly and I found some real inspiration in these pages:

“Even if the overall odds are terrible, a story that you wrote in the glow of overconfidence has an infinitely greater chance of publication than the story you didn’t write while you were feeling more realistic.”

Rogers includes something I have never encountered in a writing book. He believes that writers can’t make it without willpower and discipline; no argument there. But he also believes that willpower and discipline wear out. “What helps more is to profoundly overestimate your chances for success,” he writes. “This isn’t just a matter of positive thinking. You’ll perform best if you actually change your state to something that’s close to hypomania.” Dear Readers: Would one of you (other than Taylor) please try that and tell me how it goes.

Lastly, I want to mention Jane Anne Straw and Unstuck: A Supportive and Practical Guide to Working Through Writer’s Block. It’s not a great book, but Straw is unflaggingly honest, and frankly, reading about how screwed up she is, and her writing clients, I felt better about how screwed up I am.

Straw says good things about your writing practice, writing as a process and a product, “positive interactions with the page,” and the importance of showing up for yourself. She also suggests that you take your book on vacation. Just as sales people follow the rule of ABC (always be closing), you should always be writing. The only complication with this advice is taking your book on vacation while you are also taking your partner on vacation. On a nine-day road trip through the Great Cities of the Pacific Northwest in July, I managed to write three days out of nine while successfully maintaining my marriage. A .333 batting average was probably the best I could have hoped for.

And that’s my writing advice for my favorite tortured poets, Taylor and Travis.

Word count: 68,217. Sometimes I leap forward and sometimes I’m learning to crawl. That’s Steve’s version.

Keeping cool in the dog days of summer.

Put that writing book back where it came from or so help me

I’ve been interviewed three times.

The first time was in 1982 at a science fiction convention in Vancouver, B.C. The interviewer, a woman from a local TV station, thought I was Frank Herbert. The interview ended abruptly when she asked me, looking back, what I thought of Dune and I told her.

The second time was in 1991 when a reporter on the environmental beat asked me how I had conquered junk mail. I don’t ever expect to field a question on this topic again.

The third time was in 2023 when I won a contest at Moment magazine. One of the editors asked me for writing advice for beginners. I told her that there’s so much writing advice flying around the world that it could make you insane trying to make sense of it. As a writer, I could’ve offered some subtle imagery (roll up your sleeves, dive into the deep end, step up to the plate, fish or cut bait, cut the tape, cut the crap, the longest journey begins with a single step), but instead I kindly suggested that you just do it. I don’t believe I quoted William Zinsser, but I should’ve: “Write it first. We’ll figure out what it is later.”

I can’t predict if anyone will ever ask me this again (if they do, I have Hemingway cued up), but I do stand by my statement that there’s too much writing advice in the world. My favorite used bookstore has an entire bookcase of barely used how-to-write books. My second favorite used bookstore could boast the same if they ever got organized enough to fill up a bookcase with these hopeful yet unwanted books.

This is the part where I contradict myself

Are all writing books useless? Here’s a definitive answer: Yes and no. Yes because you could easily substitute learning about writing for writing. No because a few have spoken to me. They might speak to you. Here’s one:

Dorothea Brande’s Becoming a Writer was published in 1934, which might make it the first book ever published on the topic. (If I’m right, the second would be Brenda Ueland’s If You Want to Write, published in 1938.) Becoming a Writer still sings. Ray Bradbury read this in high school a year or two later, and it meant a lot to him; Becoming a Writer is mentioned 10 times in Becoming Ray Bradbury.

Brande believed that writing could be taught, that we all have some genius inside us, and that writing is usually taught wrong: creative writing classes only teach the technical aspects, when they should be investigating the personality flaws that get in our way. She had a lot to say about unlocking the unconscious.

She divided beginning writers into four categories:

  • The person who finds it difficult to write anything at all.
  • The one-book writer.
  • The occasional writer (writes well but suffers long silences).
  • The uneven writer (excels in some things but not in others, creating no satisfactory whole).

Brande’s diagnosis of the beginning writer’s troubles made me think of Thomas Mann: “A writer is a person for whom writing is more difficult than it is for other people.”

Brande’s ideas about the unconscious reminded me of something Brenda Ueland wrote in her autobiography, Me: “I learned that you should feel when writing, not like Lord Byron on a mountain top, but like a child stringing beads in kindergarten, happy, absorbed, and quietly putting one bead on after another.”

Finally, Brande, almost a hundred years ago, gave me my motto:

“It is well to understand as early as possible in one’s writing life that there is just one contribution which every one of us can make: we can give into the common pool of experience some comprehension of the world as it looks to each of us.”

If you read the edition with the introduction by John Gardner, you’ll find that it’s appreciative for a while, but soon veers into a defense of creative writing classes. This strikes me as a dick move.

Jeremiah Murphy was a Boston Globe columnist who was one of my journalism teachers in college. “Throw the semicolon key right out of your typewriter!” he said in our first class. He taught us how to write an obituary, which has served me well. He was probably as scared of us as we were of him.

Jeremiah Murphy’s Boston is not a writing book, and because it was published in 1974 I don’t recommend it unless he was your teacher, too, or you lived in Boston in the 1960s. But Murphy learned an important lesson early his career when the paper sent him to Rome to cover the elevation of a Boston cardinal.

“When I got to Rome I somehow got my identity mixed up and decided I was Harrison Salisbury or Scotty Reston of The New York Times or somebody like that,” he recalled. “My stories were flat.”

His editor, after reading these stories, called him and said: “I want you to write this story just the way you would write it from South Boston.”

After the ceremony, “I walked part of the way back to the hotel in the rain. I needed time to get the lead just right in my mind. I got up to my room and ordered a big steak and a lot of beer, and then I sat there in my skivvies and wrote that story just the way I would have written it from South Boston.”

So the editor’s advice (“I suspect now it was really an order”) “taught me that when you get behind a typewriter you have to be yourself, and this is what I always try to do.”

Good advice; thanks.

My word count: 67,575. I might be able to finish the first draft by the end of the Labor Day weekend. As of this evening, I have my protagonist hanging by a thread over a pit full of Bengal tigers who are really angry about colonialism. All I need is a timely rescue and an epilogue.

Not Bengal tigers, but still dangerous.

My origin story

Sometime between the Spanish Armada and the first cat video, I was a science fiction fan. I went to fannish parties. I published fanzines. I went to conventions. I danced at convention dances (“Mr. Roboto,” “Rock Me Amadeus,” “Rasputin,” “Paradise By the Dashboard Light,” “Don’t Stop ‘Til You Get Enough”). I made love to fannish women (thank you!). And I hoped that someday the Worldcon would come to a nearby city so I could go there, wear a lanyard, hand out zines, take home merch, dance to “Rock Me Amadeus,” make love to fannish women, etc.

In 2023, I learned that Worldcon was coming to Seattle in 2025.

This presented a problem. I haven’t been a fan since the internet discovered the browser. I haven’t written a genre story or even attempted one in all that time, except for a time travel story I occasionally fiddle with, though I suspect it’s more about me yelling at the modern world and less about time travel. My understanding of the speculative fiction genre fell over and died around 1997.

Then I thought, maybe I should go anyway?

I vowed to the head of my order that if I did go, it would be with a credential that’s fresher than my last published skiffy story (1991). So I set to work. I eventually decided not to attend Worldcon. (Eels put it best: “The trouble with dreams is you never know/when to hold on and when to let go.”) But I kept writing, and after 2,700 words I was done. The result displays the two major literary influences of my childhood: Andre Norton and the original Twilight Zone. Although in 2023, while I was writing it, I was also reading a lot of Isaac Bashevis Singer. Draw your own conclusions.

Actually, you can draw your own conclusions, because “My Spring Cleaning” was published on Aug. 3 in the Summer issue of Fantastic Other. Worldcon starts on Aug. 13. That’s right, bitches. With 10 days left on the shot clock and the entire season on the line, I threw the Hail Mary for the win. Unbelievable!

Maybe you can go home again. I didn’t even have to slingshot around the sun.

Amadeus, Amadeus. Amadeus.
Amadeus, Amadeus. Amadeus.

Back to my book. Word count as of today: 65,000!