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 Friday, March 14, 2008
My Archival Wanderings: Eudora Welty
Posted by maria
Hi Writers, Welcome to my month-long journey through the WD archives, in which I'm posting (almost) daily offerings from the history of our magazine. There's no rhyme or reason to my choices.
As one loyal reader pointed out, there's been a lack of female voices so far. And sadly, my wanderings have led me to conclude there was a lack of attention given to women writers up until the ‘70s in the magazine—a sign of the times, I suppose.
Ironically, I was able to find a wonderful essay by Eudora Welty, published in the February 1970 issue of Writer's Digest, entitled "Must the Novelist Crusade?" It's about the writer's social responsibility, especially in regards to writing about racism and other forms of prejudice.
Here's a short but entirely lovely excerpt to ponder:
And so finally I think we need to write with love. Not in self-defense, not in hate, not in the mood of instruction, not in rebuttal, in any kind of militance, or in apology, but with love. Not in exorcisement, either, for this is to make the reader bear a thing for you. Neither do I speak of writing forgivingly; out of love you can write with straight fury. It is the source of the understanding that I speak of; it's this that determines its nature and its reach.
What do you think? Should writers be social crusaders? Keep Writing, Maria
Writer's Digest news
3/14/2008 11:43:22 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Thursday, March 13, 2008
My Archival Wanderings: Mary Hemingway
Posted by maria
Hi Writers, Managing Editor Kara Gebhart Uhl here—Maria and Brian are wrapped up in HTML coding right now, gussying up our new website for its upcoming launch. So I took a break from reading Your Story entries to find today’s exhibit from the WD archives, a fascinating 1972 interview with Mary Hemingway who gave up a successful journalism career when she married Ernest Hemingway. I’ve skipped around a bit in order to share with you some of the more interesting questions—and answers. “An Afternoon With Mary Hemingway” by Marjorie Vandervelde. Interviewer: Didn’t you ever hesitate to give up your own writing career? (Mary Hemingway punched the air with her cigaret-holding fist.) Women take their careers too seriously. Don’t they know it is a great privilege to give their men affection, support, admiration? These things are more important than any woman’s career. … Interviewer: What were a couple of your assignments? Mary Hemingway: I did a cover story for Time Magazine about Winston Churchill. Later, I covered the “Blitz.” Interviewer: Wasn’t it difficult for a girl to be covering a man’s war? Mary Hemingway: If you mean was it a matter of flirting to get stories, let me tell you it was not. Stories cam the hard way: by using your head, working hard, and being more alert than your competition. And, by staying healthy! It took plenty of hard work to cover the Munich Agreement. And, Hitler’s march into Czechoslovakia! … Interviewer: The occasional writing you did on your own, after you were married … what did Ernest think of it? Mary Hemingway: Ernest liked my writing. And he approved of my doing it. Of course he also approved of a wife who was, above everything else, a wife. As a writer I think it would be extremely difficult to marry a well-known writer and give up my own career in order to support his work. (Perhaps this is why my husband is a web developer.) Yet often, the writer-writer partnership works. Check out this 2002 New York Times article, “ Making Books; Two Writers Under One Roof” Are you married to a writer? Or has your partner given up their dream of writing to support your work? I’d love to know your thoughts. Kara Writer's Digest news
3/13/2008 2:36:21 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Wednesday, March 12, 2008
My Archival Wanderings: Jack Kerouac
Posted by maria
Hi Writers, Today’s exhibit from the WD archives, typing which put me in the mood to write very stream-of-conscious and use lots of run on sentences, is by everyone’s favorite beatnik, Jack Kerouac, from the January 1962 issue of Writer’s Digest; so here it is, dig it man: Are Writers Made or Born?
by Jack Kerouac Writers are made, for anybody who isn’t illiterate can write; but geniuses of the writer art like Melville, Whitman or Thoreau are born. Let’s examine the word “genius.” It doesn’t mean screwiness or eccentricity or excessive “talent.” It is derived from the Latin word gignere (to beget) and a genius is simply a person who originates something never known before. Nobody but Melville could have written Moby Dick, not even Whitman or Shakespeare. Nobody but Whitman could have conceived, originated and written Leaves of Grass; Whitman was born to write a Leaves of Grass and Melville was born to write a Moby Dick. “It ain’t whatcha do,” Sy Oliver and James Young said, “it’s the way atcha do it.” Five thousand writing class students who study “required reading” can put their hand to the legend of Faustus but only one Marlowe was born to do it the way he did. I always get a laugh to hear Broadway wiseguys talk about “talent” and “genius,” but the genius, the originating force, really belongs to Brahms; the violin virtuoso is simply a talented interpreter—in other words, a “Talent.” Or you’ll hear people say that so-and-so is a “major writer” because of his “large talent.” There can be no major writer without original genius. Artists of genius, like Jackson Pollock, have painted things that have never been seen before. Anybody who’s seen his immense Samapattis of color has no right to criticize his “crazy method” of splashing and throwing and dancing around. Take the case of James Joyce: people said he “wasted” his “talent” on the stream of consciousness style, when in fact he was simply born to originate it. How would you like to spend your old age reading books about contemporary life written in the pre-Joycean style of, say, Ruskin, or William Dean Howells, or Taine? Some geniuses come with heavy feet and march solemnly forward like Dreiser, yet no one ever wrote about that America of his as well as he. Geniuses can be scintillating and geniuses can be somber, but it’s that inescapable sorrowful depth that shines through—originality. As Kerouac writes at the end: “But it ain’t whatcha write, it’s the way atcha write it.” Keep Writing, Maria Writer's Digest news
3/12/2008 4:52:10 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Tuesday, March 11, 2008
My Archival Wanderings: Ray Bradbury
Posted by maria
Hi Writers, Welcome to the archives of March, in which I'm posting an excerpt a day (more or less) throughout March.
Today's exhibit: A brief but exquisite excerpt from a February 1976 WD interview with science-fiction writer Ray Bradbury (interview by Robert Jacobs). Enjoy. WD: You're terribly prolific, but a lot of writers produce one book in a lifetime. Would you advise young writers to spend all their time polishing one piece or to go for quantity?
BRADBURY: It simply follows that quantity produces quality. Only if you do a lot will you ever be any good. If you do very little, you'll never have quality of idea or quality of output. The excitement and creativity comes from a whole lot of doing; hoping you'll suddenly be struck by lightning. If you only write a few things, you're doomed. The history of literature is the history of prolific people. I always say to students, give me four pages a day, every day. That's three or four hundred thousand words a year. Most of that will be bilge, but the rest ... It will save your life!Keep Writing, Maria Writer's Digest news
3/11/2008 2:29:10 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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 Friday, March 07, 2008
My Archival Wanderings: Stephen King on drinking
Posted by maria
Hi Writers, You may be wondering how I’ve been choosing these daily excerpts I’ve been posting from the Writer’s Digest archives. Here’s how it happens: Brian ( the Brain of Q&Q) spins me around and wherever I’m pointing at the end of my spinning is the year I choose from. It’s kind of like medieval divining or literary spin the bottle. But I digress… Today’s exhibit: a wonderful, yet somewhat disturbing piece of ephemera circa 1978 (October). This is pulled from a feature called “Booze & the Writer.” I’m not sure we could get away with doing this today: A questionnaire about the drinking habits of writers was sent out to a wide range of famous authors. Dozens of candid responses were featured in this piece, including responses from Erica Jong, Joyce Carol Oates, Norman Mailer, James A. Michener, Gay Talese and Michael Crichton among others. This was Stephen King’s response [remember this is 1978]: Drinking Habits: Somewhere in that great middle ground between medium and heavy. Beer. A lot of beer.
Hangouts: I drink mostly at home. When I’m in Boston, I drink at the Baseball Tavern across from Fenway Park. When I’m in New York, I like to go up to the top of the Beekman Tower. But mostly at home.
Drinking Companions: I like to drink alone. I never get ugly when I drink too much, I never bore myself with a lot of dull conversation, and I have never yet invited myself to step outside. Otherwise, I like to go drinking with my editor, Bill Thompson. He also never gets ugly, never wants to lay on a lot of boring raps, and has never invited me outside. Of course, he spent a lot of time down South and as a result drinks a lot of very strange drinks, but this is acceptable. After all, the Civil War has been over a long time.
On Writing and Drinking: Yes, there’s an affinity between drinking and writing. You can see the connection in the lives of Hemingway, Dylan Thomas, and William (“Don’t ask me what that sentence means, I wrote it when I was drunk”) Faulkner. I like to write when I’m drunk. I’ve never had any particular problem writing that way, although I never wrote anything that was worth a dime while under the influence of pot or any of the hallucinogenics. I think that alcohol is an extremely benign poison. I wrote one novel, The Shining, that was more or less about the terrors of living with the destructive drunk —and I have known one of two in my lifetime—but I have never been particularly destructive while under the influence myself. Writers who drink constantly do not last long, but a writer who drinks carefully is probably a better writer. It may be that the main effect of the grain or the grape on the creative personality is that necessary sense of newness and freshness, that feeling that the world of sense and feeling can be grasped. Those are feelings we tend to lose as we grow older. I know that as well as anyone, I think, because I’m only 30—and you tend to start losing that crazy and wonderful sense of cocksureness sometime around 25 … at about the same time that you discover that sex may not be the only possible definition of living. Viewed in that way, drinking is a crutch. But nobody gets through life without a crutch or two. And basically, writers are no different from anyone else. If I were a plumber, my drinking habits would probably be the same. Fascinating. What do you think about the stereotype of the drinking writer? Join me next Monday for my latest spin through the archives. Keep Writing, Maria blogs and online writing
3/7/2008 10:40:26 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Thursday, March 06, 2008
My Archival Wanderings: Truman Capote interview
Posted by maria
Hi Writers, It’s the 2nd week in my archival excavations and I’m beginning to worry, just a little, about booklice ... but it’s well worth it for all the great stuff I’ve been finding. Today’s exhibit: An excerpt from a 1966 Q&A with Truman Capote [from the January 1966 issue of Writer’s Digest. Interview conducted by Roy Newquist] Newquist: What obligation, if any, do you feel the writer owes the subject matter he works with and the public for which he writes? Capote: I think the only person a writer has an obligation to is himself. If what I write doesn’t fulfill something in me, if I don’t honestly feel it’s the best I can do, then I’m miserable. In fact, I just don’t publish it. The only obligation any artist can have is to himself. His work means nothing, otherwise. It has no meaning. That’s why it’s so absolutely boring to write a film script. The great sense of self-obligation doesn’t enter into it because too many people are involved. Thus the thing that propels me, that makes me proud of my work, is utterly absent. I’ve only written two film scripts and I must admit that in a peculiar way I enjoyed doing them, but the true gratification of writing was completely absent; the obligation was to the producers and the actors, to what I was being paid to do, and not to myself. The only really gratifying thing is to serve yourself. To give yourself free law, as it were.
Newquist: If you were to give advice to a young person intent on a literary career, what would that advice be? Capote: People are always asking me if they believe that writing can be taught. My answer is, “No—I don’t think writing can be taught.” But on the other hand, if I were a young writer and convinced of my talent, I could do a lot worse than to attend a really good college workshop—for one reason only. Any writer, and especially the talented writer, needs an audience. The more immediate that audience is, the better for him because it stimulates him in his work; he gets a better view of himself and a running criticism. Young writers couldn’t get this even if they were publishing stories all the time. You publish a story and there’s no particular reaction. It’s as though you shot an arrow into the dark. You may get letters from people who like or didn’t like it, or a lot of reviews that really don’t mean anything, but if you are working in close quarters with others who are also interested in writing, and you’ve got an instructor with a good critical sense, there’s a vast stimulation. I’ve never had this happen to me, but I know it must be so. I’ve given various readings and lectures at universities, so I have had some first-hand observation of it, though I never attended such a workshop myself, but if I were a young writer I would. I think a college workshop would be enormously helpful and stimulating.
Newquist: In looking at today’s creative arts, literature in particular, what do you find that you most admire? Conversely, what do you most deplore? Capote: I find that a very hard question to answer. I really don’t deplore anything, because I like all creative actions just as actions themselves, whether I personally enjoy them or not. I can’t deplore them just because I don’t think they are right. Now, none of this “beat” writing interests me at all. I think it’s fraudulent. I think it’s all evasive. Where there is no discipline there is nothing. I don’t even find that the beat writing has a surface liveliness—but that’s neither here nor there because I’m sure that eventually something good will come out of it. Some extraordinary person will be encouraged by it who could never have accepted the rigid disciplines of what I consider good writing. This excerpt was pulled from a much longer interview. I really do wish I could share the entire piece with you, it's amazing, but there are rights issues I need to be careful about. I’ll explain further at the end of my archival wanderings in late-March. Check back tomorrow for the continuation of my big dig. Keep Writing, Maria Writer's Digest news
3/6/2008 1:29:21 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Wednesday, March 05, 2008
My Archival Wanderings: 1958 Rod Serling Q&A
Posted by maria
Hi Writers, Today's exhibit in my month-long dive into the Writer's Digest archives is a Q&A with screenwriter Rod Serling. This ran a year before The Twilight Zone debuted on network TV. I apologize for my lack of sticking to any sort of logical or chronological order with these excerpts. I guess I'm not that linear after all.
Anyway, here is Rod Serling for your reading pleasure:
[from Writer's Digest June/July 1958: one year before The Twilight Zone first appeared on TV)
Question: Do you ever write your story with a particular actor or actress in mind? Answer: No. There are simply too few top-rate actors and actresses around to be able to do that. Usually, I have as many as three or four of one type of actor or actress to fill the part.
Question: You had only two or three credits and were able to start right in with a top agent. How? Answer: I started writing for TV in 1949 when even the large networks weren’t sure what a TV writer was. An impressive list of credits was not required to work with a smart agent then.
Question: Are you able to write, well, anything you wish? Answer: Fear keeps you from writing just anything. You can’t fight a story out. I guarantee that if you sweat and worry, you’ll never make it.
Question: What are some of your weaknesses? Answer: Plotting and writing about women. I can’t get close up to a woman and study her emotions and what she thinks. I can’t write a love scene without blushing. I feel that I’m barging in without being invited.
Question: Does the beginning writer have a better chance to sell the ½-hour show, the hour show or the 1 ½-hour show? Answer: The ½ hour show is easiest for the beginner, because there are more of them. The 1 1/2 show is almost impossible to break into for the beginning writer.
Question: How many credits must a writer have today before being able to work with a top agent? Answer: God only knows. Of course, magazine credits are good and the more known the magazine to which you contribute, the better become your chances.
Question: Will producers read unsolicited scripts? Answer: If a writer doesn’t have an agent, it’s definitely best to query a producer before submitting a script, even an outline. Another point to remember in preparing your TV script is to leave the directing to the directors if you are not familiar with the business directions. A story is used if it has something good, regardless of the lack of technical TV knowhow.
Rod Serling is not overly enthusiastic about the controlled effect TV has on writers (the restrictions sponsors demand and the reluctancy of TV producers to produce controversial shows). However, he says, “There’s something opiatic about TV. When people take off their shoes and relax in their living rooms, it’s difficult to prod them into thinking. Yet, if there’s any art form that can influence people everywhere, it’s TV. It’s so constant in its existence. It’s always there.”
More of my archive digging finds tomorrow, so stay tuned. Keep Writing, Maria
Writer's Digest news
3/5/2008 9:15:43 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Tuesday, March 04, 2008
My Archival Wanderings: Erle Stanley Gardner advice
Posted by maria
Hi Writers, I'm dedicating the month of March to my excavations of the Writer's Digest archives. Today's exhibit: this excerpt from a 1931 piece by Erle Stanley Gardner, author of the Perry Mason series.
What Chance has the New Writer?
By Erle Stanley Gardner (January 1931 Writer’s Digest)
After you’ve written a story, the thing to do is sell it. Sounds simple, and it is, if one will follow certain basic principles of salesmanship.
The real trouble with the writing game is that no general rule can be worked out for uniform guidance, and this applies to sales as well as to writing.
In the course of six years of more or less intensive study, I’ve seen every rule laid down by a prominent author contradicted by some other equally prominent author.
“Write of something you know,” says one man, and make it sound reasonable. Then along comes another and says, “You’re writing to get away from the humdrum and take other people away from the humdrum. If you know Fifth Avenue and nothing else, for Heaven’s sake write of the South Seas. If you know Kansas, write of the wild west. Your work will have a freshness of viewpoint and treatment you’d never get from writing of humdrum subjects.”
“Revise, revise, revise,” harps another. “You’re up against stiff competition, and you’ve got to be certain that the work that goes in over your name is as nearly perfect as you can make it. Write your first draft, then cut it, polish it, check it over for trite words, crisp it up, polish it until it sparkles like a jewel.”
And there’s a lot to be said in his favor.
Then along comes some other man and says: “This revision is the bunk. You polish your work, yes; but you polish all the life out of it. Fiction has got to be created at a white heat. What’s more, when you get to writing action fiction for the wood pulps, you’ve got to turn out a quantity if you want to make any money. It’s better to write a new story than revise an old yarn.”
And the name of the man who makes that statement will be the name of a man who sells his stuff right and left.
And so on, ad infinitum. I could cite examples by the hundred. One man claims the average writer jumps at his machine too soon. He hasn’t got all the plot worked out. He should take more time with plot before he starts in on story. Then along comes an H. Bedford Jones with an easy smile and says: “Put a piece of paper in a typewriter. Think of an interesting opening situation. Write it down. Then go on with the story. The characters will take care of developments.”
The bewildered student-writer (in which category is numbered every writer who is worth his salt, whether he’s selling or not) is doomed if he does, and damned if he doesn’t.
Now far be it from me to add to this contradictory mass of advice. It relates to the sales as well as to every other phase of the writing profession. Some man says “Mail out your story, don’t write a letter.” Another chap chirps, “Always write a personal letter to the editor, telling him what you’ve tried to accomplish in the story.” One writer claims that a story should never be sent out more than three or four times without revision. Another says “perseverance and postage will sell anything.”
In short, there simply aren’t general rules. There are basic principles, but no hard and fast rules.Geez, the more things change the more they stay the same. Check back for more tomorrow. Keep Writing, Maria Writer's Digest news
3/4/2008 10:31:05 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Monday, March 03, 2008
Do you deviate from the norm?
Posted by maria
Hi Writers, I have a confession: I don't really think about the official demographic data when putting together the editorial content for Writer's Digest. I prefer to think our magazine appeals to writers who cut a wide swath across the age, gender, income spectrum.
At any rate, our marketing department recently surveyed our readers and this is what they came back with:
Age: 74% 41 and Over 47% Over 50
Gender: 37% Male 63% Female
State: 18% FL, NY, TX (6% each) 12% California
Education: 64% College Degree 27% Master's or higher
Experience 31% Published writer 55% Serious aspiring writer
67% are primarily interested in writing fiction 40% also interested in writing screenplays 39% also interested in writing non-fiction 25% also interested in writing memoirs 24% also interested in writing poetry
71% primarily use Windows XP 75% primarily use Microsoft Word
26% read The Writer 18% read Poets & Writers 10% read Publisher's Weekly 51% visit WritersMarket.com 13% visit Publisher's Weekly (pw.com) 9% visit MediaBistro.com
So please let me know where you fit—or don't fit—into this survey. Are the marketing folks way off base, or right on target? As always, I appreciate your feedback.
Keep Writing, Maria P.S. In my quest to get my bosses to yell "uncle" and let me digitize the WD archives, I'm going to post cool stuff from our archives all through March. So if you're a lover of literary ephemera come back for more.
Writer's Digest news
3/3/2008 1:30:49 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Friday, February 29, 2008
 Thursday, February 28, 2008
My Archival Wanderings: a Norman Mailer letter
Posted by maria
Hi Writers, Thanks very much to all who are supporting me in my quest to get the WD archives digitized. It's starting to gain some momentum here, so please spread the word to your fellow writers and keep the good karma coming.
Today, I'm pulling out old magazines for an AP photographer to accompany the story I mentioned in my previous entry. Well, I was having quite the blast when I got ever so rudely kicked out of our company library for a meeting. The nerve.
Anyway, for your reading enjoyment, I found this hilarious letter Norman Mailer wrote to the editor in our March 1970 issue:
Dear Editor, Regarding the interview you printed with me in the December issue done by Oriana Fallaci—Miss Fallaci is a talented journalist with a gift for making people talk more than they care to talk as she runs them through an interview. Her English however is uncertain, so uncertain that she uses a tape recorder, not as she confesses for the record but because she cannot understand exactly what you say. The use of a tape recorder is probably excusable, especially by a foreign journalist, but what is not altogether forgivable is that Miss Fallaci has the habit of rewriting the transcription with a freedom matched only by her ability to spurn the word you did use.
Since she was writing for an Italian audience, she took pains to convert my answers into Italian, which is to say that she rephrased my dialogue in such a way that it would make sense to Italian readers. The result, now translated back into English from the free translation into Italian, is a first-rate piece of surrealism. Nearly all the ideas I expressed to her find some place in her work, but it has become her work. It may even read like Oriana Fallaci interviewing Oriana Fallaci. My words, my style, my very clumsiness of speech—which any friend can testify to—have been converted into the spoiled and petulant tones of an Italian intellectual loved somewhat too much by his mother and I protest, fellas, I protest. Whatever my vices—they are many—I am not quite so bright an ass as Miss Fallaci would have me.
Norman Mailer Provincetown, Mass.
Ahh, rest in peace, Norman. You were a spirited one.
Keep Writing, Maria
Writer's Digest news
2/28/2008 10:18:12 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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 Tuesday, February 26, 2008
The WD Archives—and my new pet project
Posted by maria
Hi Writers, Last week, we hosted an AP reporter who flew in from New York to spend two days combing through the Writer's Digest archives. He's writing a feature on the history of the publishing industry and found plenty of fodder for his piece here—in fact 88 years of writing and publishing advice. Last year WD Books published a book featuring some great pieces from our archives, you can read an article about that here. As you can imagine, there's amazing stuff in our archives—interviews and first-hand essays and advice pieces written by just about any literary luminary you can think of from the past century. And as we were shuffling those crumbling, leather-bound magazines around—we're talking actual bound copies of the original magazines going back to 1920—I realized that wow, we really need to get our archives digitized. And soon, before all that history crumbles away with the low-grade paper it was printed on. I've known this for awhile, of course. But as often happens, preserving the past takes a backseat to the pressing needs of the present. Like hitting deadlines for the next issue, and building a better website and blogging and hitting circ numbers to keep our publisher happy, etc., etc. etc... So, I've got this awesome task ahead of me. It's something I've charged myself with, and something that I know in my gut I have to do. But the sheer size of this project is overwhelming—we're talking months and months of scanning hundreds of thousands of pages of historical content. It's a big, big job. And I'm now in the process of convincing my bosses that not only does this need to be done, but that people might actually pay for CDs of our archives. You could really help me build my case to get this done by saying sure, I'd buy that. So if you're into this pet project of mine, please leave me a comment here. I'm assembling reader feedback for my proposal now, and I'd sure appreciate hearing from you all. Keep Writing, Maria Writer's Digest news
2/26/2008 10:41:10 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
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