The plot was beginning to take shape, its long chronological lines appearing, dare I say, quite gracefully in my mind’s eye. But my writer’s tale is not one of romantic poverty or greats arcs of streaming consciousness liberated between bar jobs and waiting tables.
Writing ... and writing
I’d like to dedicate this post to my father, Geoffrey, who died on Friday.
The plot was beginning to take shape, its long chronological lines appearing, dare I say, quite gracefully in my mind’s eye. But my writer’s tale is not one of romantic poverty or greats arcs of streaming consciousness liberated between bar jobs and waiting tables.
I had been a senior(ish) executive who’d done such glamorous jobs as running Robert Maxwell’s law publisher or managing ad campaigns for dialysis machines and chemicals.
Sadly, none of that had provided financial security so I turned to writing and advising businesses on communications. And thus I found myself churning out speeches, brochures, websites, in fact the whole panoply of message-carriers, in fractured parallel to composing the novel.
The main lesson I learned was discipline and compartmentalisation. If I’d been earning all day, don’t touch Grosse Fugue. Creating a complex corporate communications is the antithesis of literature. That’s not to say, it can’t be satisfying, only that it’s a completely different writing experience. If during periods of high endeavour, the itch needed scratching, go back to the book but only for background reading. If business was slack, get stuck in.
It didn’t exactly make for smooth progress! I was dimly aware of professional novelists who had a strict regimen of preparing, writing, relaxing. But that, to me, was the stuff of paradise, where a career was on an even keel and both accommodated and demanded structure. It seemed – and seems – a luxury resort way beyond my current horizon (albeit lusted after in great gobbets of desire).
And that really set the pattern for the intervening years. It was staccato progress, interspersed with earning money, prolonged crises of confidence and marvellous moments of self-belief.
I kept beat to that wonderful line by Fernando Pessoa on the glories of actually writing: “When I am at the wheel, I am greater than myself.”
But it wasn’t only writing. My imagination doesn’t stretch to conjuring whole worlds from nothing. It has to be rooted in historical reality, so there was at times more reading than writing as I immersed myself in factual accounts of the times I sought to recreate. My next post will look at this part of the process.
Ian Phillips is a freelance writer for businesses whose first novel, Grosse Fugue, will be published by Alliance Publishing Press on April 3rd. He’s tweeting developments @Ian_at_theWord.
I have a book by Orhan Parmak called snow but I have not read it it. I have read Animal Farm, Gullivers Travels, and Call of the Wild and White Fang by Jack London.
My list differs to yours considerably.
Jane Austen
Henry James
Joseph Conrad
Charles Dickens
Thomas Hardy
George Eliot
Anne Bronte
Charlotte Bronte
William Shakespeare
Homer
Franz Kafka
E M Forster
Mark Twain
Louise May Alcott
Daniel Defoe
Robert Louis Stephenson
Nathaniel Hawthorne
George Simenon
Michael Morpurg
Ted Hughes
Joanne Harris
Eva Ibbotson
Anne Fine
Sharon Creech
Philip Pulman
Kevin Crossley Holland
Gillian Cross
Margaret McCaughrean
Malorie Blackman
Helen Cresswell
Rosemary Sutcliffe
Elizabeth Taylor ( Not the actress )
Jenny Nimmo
Sally Gardner
Anthony Horowitz
Margerate Mahy
My favourite authors?
I've read all of George Orwell and Primo Levi, so I guess they qualify! A lot of Jonathan Swift and whole raft of European writers: Stefan Zweig, Romain Rolland, Fernando Pessoa, Franz Werfel (all of them dead). Of living writers, there's no-one who I would automatically buy their next book but I always read reviews of the latest Orhan Pamuk.
A quick list of favourite novels:
Jean-Christophe - Romain Rolland
The Book of Disquiet – Fernando Pessoa
Animal Farm – George Orwell
Gulliver’s Travels – Jonathan Swift
The Book Thief – Markus Zusak
Embers – Sandor Marai
The Forty Days of Musa Dagh – Franz Werfel
Crime and Punishment - Fyodor Dostoyevsky
And Quiet Flows The Don - Mikhail Sholokhov
Music and Silence – Rose Tremain
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time – Mark Haddon
My Name Is Red - Orhan Pamuk
And some non-fiction:
If This Is A Man/The Truce – Primo Levi
The Holocaust: The Jewish Tragedy – Martin Gilbert
Life of Beethoven – Alexander Thayer (ed Forbes)
The Man Who Mistook His Wife For A Hat – Oliver Sacks
American Prometheus: The Triumph and Tragedy of J. Robert Oppenheimer – Kai Bird & Martin Sherwin
A Life Torn By History: Franz Werfel 1890-1945 – Peter Stephan Jungk
The World Of Yesterday – Stefan Zweig
Crowds and Power – Elias Canetti
Freud: A Life For Our Time – Peter Gay
Georges de La Tour – Jacques Thuillier
The People of the Abyss – Jack London
Primo Levi – Ian Thomson
Hope that's of some interest!
Ian, my thinking was based on saving time for would be authors if they need to research. I am curious as to what other writers read. Is it beneficial to their writing?
Who are your favourite authors? I have a list of traditional and contemporary authors that I tend to stick with. I will occasionally diversify to read other highly-acclaimed authors, but I am not short of excellent books to read.
I believe that you learn consciously, and sub-consciously from excellent authors past and present. However it is important to read distinguished authors of quality work who have achieved success in the contemporary world of publishing.