jacquelineb: (Default)
jacquelineb ([personal profile] jacquelineb) wrote2009-07-14 02:01 pm
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Vid

Not sure if I can 'actually' believe it, but it is an interesting way of thinking of the creative 'spirit.'

threewalls: threewalls (Default)

[personal profile] threewalls 2009-07-21 07:30 pm (UTC)(link)
This response to this woman's talk reminded me of comments I didn't make when you first linked it: http://yuki-onna.livejournal.com/505990.html?format=light

Knowing the book this woman wrote that is her fantastic success, that it is a memoir that involved travelling the world and finding enlightenment in foreign/third world countries and then taking her enlightenment home with her to the US, I'm skeptical of her 'I am an vessel for a muse' line of argument. I'm skeptical that she's looking to avoid fearing for the next book as much as she's looking to avoid responsibility for the last one.

Writing is work. Not only is it work, it's the writer's work and the writer's responsibility, not that of some etherial being and I'm suspicious of people that genuinely (as opposed to jokingly-- I know all the men and women in my head aren't real) espouse that.

But also: audience reaction to your work does not have a direct relationship with the writer's experience of writing the book and their own opinion of the 'goodness' of the work. I'm pretty sure more people comment on my work because of any number of factors that are not my prose: my reputation, my metadata content, the time they have on their hands, the community I posted it to all.

Is she suggesting a 'muse' has control over her readers' lives and experiences to make them buy her books? Really?
threewalls: threewalls (Default)

[personal profile] threewalls 2009-07-23 11:24 pm (UTC)(link)
I agree on not beating up on oneself when the writing is not as smooth as on others, or tying one's self-worth to work-- by this, do you mean tying your worth as a writer to how "easily" good writing comes?

I hope this doesn't sound insensitive, and I very much agree that ways to not beat yourself up are awesome, but I guess I see it as: I have good days and bad days, and so do all other writers. I once read Neil Gaiman's thoughts about such things somewhere on his blog (can't find right now, sorry!) To paraphrase: how smoothly a passage of writing comes out of one does not bear any relationship to how good the final product is.

I've found this myself, when I've had finished works I consider really good that have come both easy and others with torturous difficulty. There is also no relationship between the comments I get and whether a story was torturous or easy in coming, either.

But maybe the pressure is less on me all around. Aiming for publication, you might be under more pressure in more of a hurry to write "good" easily and fluidly as often as possible?