There's a lot of wisdom to be found in
children's literature. In We're Going On a Bear Hunt, Michael
Rosen offers us the valuable insight:
'We can't go over it, we
can't go under it.
Ohhh NO!
We gotta go through it.'
Ohhh NO!
We gotta go through it.'
That's true of life and writing. In
both there are things you can side-step but there are lots of things
that you know you've got to go through because they matter to you. In
my life I will prioritise the needs of my children and grandchildren
above all things (thus the blogging silence over Christmas);
especially the education and care of my autistic grandson. Autism
would make a good obstacle in a Bear Hunt. It's a deep, thick swamp,
with unexpected pot holes where you go down over your head and wonder
if this time you're going to come up again. That said, he is the
adored heart of our family; the funniest, sweetest and most loving
little boy, and every achievement he makes lightens and warms our
lives.
In writing there are also things you
have to go through in order to reach your goal. Who hasn't muttered
about the need to write or edit when there are so many other things
to do, or when the task seems endless and it would be so pleasant to
curl up in the armchair and watch TV. However, at the end of the day,
there's nothing to compare to the feeling of triumph and fulfilment
when you've got your chunk of writing, even if it's in desperate need
of editing and polishing. Of course, there's the other writing
quagmire to go through, submission and rejection. However with all
the new independent publishing options, it is now possible to go
round that particular alligator filled swamp.
For me there's the added writing
deadline of monthly articles for Mystery People on the topic of
authors of the Golden Age of Crime. It's on my list to put my past
articles on my website (www.carolwestron.com) but, for
the moment, check them out on www.mysterypeople.co.uk/.
Before I get
started, the
prospect of researching
and writing the articles seems like an immense mountain to climb, but
as soon as I'm into it I'm totally hooked. It has benefited my own
reading and writing, and
I've discovered
some incredible authors that I hadn't encountered when I read the
standard Golden Age novels as a teenager. If I'd gone over or under
instead of through the article writing
I might never have read the incomparable Edmund Crispin... scary
thought!
Of
course, there are the things that don't give you an option of going
over and under, like the stroke I suffered on New Year's Eve 2011.
When I woke to
find my right side paralysed and my speech a muffled mess, I only had
one choice, go through it and keep on hoping. I was fortunate in
recovering pretty well, but nobody knew just how terrifying each step
back into the
world was,
especially, less than six
months later, when I made my
first public
appearance as the moderator of the Deadly Dames. Even
worse was the fear that my brain, with a proportion of my 'little
grey cells' eliminated, wouldn't be up to the creative task any more.
Fortunately it is, although
probably creakier and less confident than before. Ironically
I have probably done more in the past two years because of the stroke
than I'd have done without that kick into action, including
moderating several panels and giving presentations;
returning to teaching Creative Writing; editing and, last but by no
means least, setting up, in
collaboration
with two good friends and colleagues, an independent, co-operative
publishing company, Pentangle Press. My first contemporary crime
novel, The Terminal Velocity of Cats,
was published in July 2013. It's selling steadily and has got some
great reviews. My second police procedural, About
the Children, is
due to be published later this month, so I'd better stop writing
about it and get on with that final edit.
With
life and writing, there are lots of things to get in your way, but
it's all down to hard work, staying focused and
going through all
the things that get in your way.
Nice post, Carol, I've only just discovered your blog, but I'll certainly be keeping an eye on it from now on. I'm looking forward to the arrival of ABOUT THE CHILDREN. If it's as gripping as TERMINAL VELOCITY OF CATS (what am I saying, I'm sure it is!) then it'll be a real page-turner.
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