Alone - or all one? Sherry Ashworth
The best part about being a
writer is the act of writing itself. And
also getting feedback from readers. Oh,
and research – especially if it involves travelling and food. And using writing to help you make sense of
the world and if possible, to change it for the better. Which can simply mean entertaining people.
The downside to being a writer –
(I am shouting now) ISOLATION!!! First, you actually have to be alone to
write. To be fair, not always - Charles
Maturin, author of the wonderful Gothic novel MELMOTH THE WANDERER wrote
standing up at a lectern surrounded by his family going about its daily
business. But I can’t do that. And writers don’t have a workplace – no
colleagues to hang out with at the watercooler.
Isolation also breeds neurosis.
Is my stuff any good? Is someone
else’s stuff better than mine? Are all
other writers banging furiously away at their keyboards seized by angelic
inspiration while I polish my Freecell skills and check Twitter for the
umpteenth time?
Alone, you are that bit more
vulnerable. More likely to respond in an
extreme fashion to praise or to criticism.
In the bad old days before electronic publishing and creative writing
courses, you generally wrote alone until you were lucky enough to get an agent
and then a publisher – but of course a publisher is not a single entity, but
like the many-headed hydra, it’s composed of editors and money men and
publicity and marketing and receptionists etcetera etcetera. A lot of people with corporate and personal interests at heart. Which might, but might not, be your interests
too. Lots of people, and only one of you.
But hey, why go there? This is 2012 and things really are getting
better. There’s been a revolution. Other writers and writing communities are
just a click away. And you don’t need a
middle-man (or woman) to get your book out there. You just need to be able to write the best
book you can, to acquire the skills and knowledge to convert your manuscript to
an e-book (or find someone who can) and let people know what you’ve done.
For me, the last is the
hardest. I was brought up to think that
boasting or drawing too much attention to yourself is bad manners. It’s just not British. In my ideal, perfect world, my own personal
utopia, people are magically drawn to my books without me having to do a thing
about it. But the reality is that no-one
will KNOW I’ve written a self-published book unless I tell them, and no one
will want to read it unless I let them know what it’s about and say something
to hook their interest. And the more
people I tell, the more people who might want to read my book.
But – aaargghh! It’s hard, and goes against the grain. But.
Because I believe that e-publishing offers so much to writers and
readers, and it’s the world I want to be in, I’m going to tell you about my
new, self-published novel. It’s called
Good Recipes and Bad Women. I wrote it
because I wanted to relive my early teenage years, when I was particularly
happy. I was brought up in north London,
in a Jewish community which has long since dissipated. I was one of the generation of scholarship
kids, plucked from a working class background to be educated in a top direct
grant grammar school. I was 10 when the
Beatles started, and 14 during the Summer of Love, when I first got interested
in Boys. And my mum was my best mate.
Good Recipes and Bad Women
celebrates all of that. It’s a feelgood
read that crosses genres. It’s rom com
but not contemporary as it takes place in 1967.
Both adults and teenagers can relate to it as there are two heroines –
Jo who’s 15 and Dorrie, her mother, who’s 42.
It’s universal in themes – growing up, finding yourself – but set in a
closed world – the Jewish community of south Tottenham. It references both the Who and gefilte
fish. It’s semi-autobiographical and
entirely made-up.
It’s also very close to my heart
as it’s a tribute to my mum, who died thirteen years ago. It’s not always easy to remember the people
we love as they should be remembered because we can be haunted by their last
days. I wanted to bring back my mother
in her prime.
God knows what she would have
made of the novel! But here’s something
I do know – she would have loved that I am publishing it as an e-book. She was always – in her own words – on the
side of the underdog. Remember, she’d
say to me, we’re plebs. Your
great-grandfather was a woodcutter. My
mother shopped only in markets and a bargain made her day. And most of all she loved reading.
If she was alive now, I’d have
bought her a Kindle. She would have been
amazed that you could get all her favourite classics free – oy vey! She would have also been VERY impressed that
so many books were bargains – that the middlemen multi-national publishers
weren’t making ginormous profits. She
would have loved the ease of buying books online. And that you could make the font as big as
you liked, and that the Kindle would be light as a feather in her hand.
My mother loved reading because
she told me it took her into different worlds.
I’m thrilled to be part of the world of self-publishing and AuthorsElectric.
Comments
As re the isolation. I have to tell you that's the bit I LOVE about writing fiction. But that's from 20 years in screenwriting/playwriting where you are NEVER alone (if you're employed anyway) because you're always in meetings or pitching or with directors/producers etc and believe me all that is very counter creative most of the time - so I'm OVERJOYED to have made the transition (retirement?) to sitting in a room on my own WRITING without worrying about getting to a meeting, arguing the toss... etc etc. And with the 'connected' world via internet one can get all the community one wants without ever having to leave ones room. Think positive! It could be worse, I promise.
As lonely as we may feel in the writing world, it's good to know that we're really not alone. Posts like yours prove that others have the same worries, emotions, and hopes as the rest of us.
Thanks so much for sharing your thoughts and I look forward to reading your book!
I am, I'm afraid, one of those terrible writers who get very nervous at isolation - I love dark secluded spaces but I love best to be sharig them with co-conspirators plotting the overthrow of the literary canon or the like - I'm sure it comes from 10 years of all-nighters in people's rooms as a student
I hate the self-promotion aspect of e-publishing too. It feels like showing off, and I've always felt that people who show off have little or nothing to show off about... for me, psychologically, it's a hard one. As for isolation - when work's going well, I actually need it, but when things are slow - well let's not go there.
As a pleb underdog myself, your book, and your Mother, sound very interesting.
And thanks to you I have now heard of, and read the first paragraphs of, MELMOTH THE WANDERER!