Not everything we write is wonderful - Jo Carroll
Not everything we write is wonderful.
There, I've said it. And I think it's particularly relevant for
memoir writers - including travel writers. So I'm going to give myself a bit of
a kicking here, but hopefully some of it will echo in your chambers too.
There are many who can write beautiful sentences. The basis of
our craft is sentences. We can perfect our grammar and absorb the thesaurus and
create images that leave a reader bewildered by our erudition.
Yes, but is it interesting? I could describe, in glorious detail,
my hotel room in Killarney (I've just got back from Ireland) but I won't
because - let's be honest - who the hell cares? It was clean and comfortable,
and there were no rats or cockroaches (very relevant given some of the places I
visit), so what more do you need to know; I ate great food (Irish cuisine has
improved hugely in recent years) and drool over the Guinness (oh the Guinness)
but my readers - if any have stuck through this ugly, convoluted sentence -
will fall asleep.
For our challenge is surely two-fold - to write beautifully, but
also (and I would argue more importantly) to be interesting, or funny, or
original. And how can we know? There is always someone, even if it is only
Auntie Nellie, who will tell us we are wonderful. And there may even be someone
on tenterhooks waiting for details of hotel rooms and what I eat for breakfast.
You might even suggest that I should write about it, just to please the reader
who has got this far in the hope of such nuggets.
Up to a point we must rely on the advice of other readers and
writers. But I think we must also look to ourselves. Not everything I do or
think is of interest to anyone other than me. My reader doesn't really give a
toss about me and my little world; he or she wants something that touches them
in some way. A what-would-I-do moment, a goodness-me moment, a glimpse of
something different or glorious or funny. A titbit that will lead them into a
different way of thinking, or feeling, or looking at the world.
All of which doesn't mean that I can't have a wonderful time,
wherever I am. It simply means that I only write about it if I think it has
relevance in your lives as well as mine.
And here, just for the one person who might be interested in
where I've been, is a photograph from Ireland.
You can find more if you play about on my website here –
follow the links to the travel and then Ireland pages.
Comments