Seven Years a Blogger -- by Umberto Tosi
Herb Caen |
Beyond personal and public events, I've written about my books here, about writing, the peeves and bigger questions that bedevil independent writers like ourselves in the new era of digital publishing and its contradictions. Mainly, our issues remain the same as always: deciphering the creative process, and figuring why it seems to stall out sometimes. Most of all, however, its not been a one-way street., I've learned a lot from what our 28 other members have been writing here every day along with our guest bloggers - a lot more than I could on my own.
I wish I could be like my self-disciplined colleagues who write their posts well ahead of deadlines. Not me. My tee shirt says: "If it weren't for the last minute, nothing would ever get done." I still hit the wall every time, even after a lifetime of writing for newspaper, magazine, internet and book deadlines. Alas, I must nod to my love-hate relationship with writing. I can't live with it or without it.
As a creative writer, retired from 9-to-5 routine, I can untether myself from clock and calendar, at least for a spell or two. But add a fixed deadline - even as modest a constraint as that of this monthly blog post, and the old rush returns like a shot of single malt whiskey after a dry spell. I'm back in the land of hard-boiled Walter Burns newspapering where I began what passes for my career. As such, I amuse myself by making my blog a homage to the roughly stylish columnists who were my heroes back then. Their names are nearly forgotten now: the San Francisco Chronicle's Herb Caen, the New York Herald Tribune's and Daily News' Jimmy Breslin, Chicago's Mike Royko, The L.A. Times' suburban poet Jack Smith, later the acerbic Molly Ivins of the Dallas Times Herald and, my mentor, long-ago L.A. Times ace reporter and front-page daily columnist Gene Sherman.
Gene Sherman, c, aboard WW2 cruiser |
These columnists -- and a few others like them -- spun witty, anecdotal tales daily that combined personal and public happenings holding readers' attention to the last word, day in and day out. Each could weave the slightest zephyr of a lead -- an overheard quote, a throwaway detail from the news, an impression -- into a thousand-word gem rain-or-shine. I wouldn't pretend to match their prodigiousness. The dashing Caen, for example, churned out 16,000 daily, thousand-word columns. All this and Caen, like other of his rare ilk, wrote a fair number of influential books and coined neologisms along the way. (Caen, for example, invented the term "beatnik".)
Back in my San Francisco days, I remember Caen handing in his copy at the Chron by 11:30 a.m. in time to meet and hold forth with a group of us punctually at lunch, brimming with wisecracks and anecdotes. He did have an assistant to fact-check his copy. Nevertheless, I always had the impression that he could have produced a second column as seamlessly as the first each day and joined us for cocktails.
I'm lucky to have known Sherman, Smith, and Caen personally during my serpentine career as a journalist and writer, and lifted a glass with some of the others. They were far from perfect model citizens -- actually, more rascals then models of rectitude, but with rough-hewn, consistent ethics all. We could use them now, for all their flaws and obsessions. I can only hope that no matter how long I last, I'm remembered half as well.
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Enjoy my Hollywood noir detective thriller: The Phantom Eye (a Frank Ritz Mystery) - soon to be followed by Oddly Dead and Death and the Droid."Tosi writes with tremendous style and a pitch perfect ear for everything that makes the classic noir detective story irresistible. Philip Marlowe and Lew Archer, make room for Frank Ritz!" - Elizabeth McKenzie, best-selling author of The Portable Veblen.
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