FOR LOVE OR MONEY? WHY DO WRITERS WRITE?
An Australan take on the subject from The Weekend Australian:
Rosemary Sorensen asks writers why they bother .
WHEN Arundhati Roy won the Booker Prize with her first and only novel, The God of Small Things, she said: "I just wrote this book because I wanted to write it and not because I wanted to change my life."
But writing it did change her life, and the Indian writer wasn't pleased.
Frustration, obscurity, povery: Why do writers bother?
She hated the endless interviews, the posh hotels, the constant scrutiny. She has since become a different kind of writer, a polemicist who weighs in on political and social debates, and she is unlikely to follow up her extraordinary novel with another book of fiction.
Frustration, obscurity, povery: Why do writers bother?
She hated the endless interviews, the posh hotels, the constant scrutiny. She has since become a different kind of writer, a polemicist who weighs in on political and social debates, and she is unlikely to follow up her extraordinary novel with another book of fiction.
That's an impossible thought for Perth writer Brenda Walker, who recently published her fourth novel, The Wing of Night. "It's what I am," she says of her need to write novels. "For me, my work is about telling stories to stave off death. I'm always Scheherazade at dawn."
Like so many other Australian novelists, Walker works as an academic as well as a writer. Despite a recent bout of illness, she has not let up on the steady work towards a new book, a process that's slow but methodical: like a good cook, Walker makes sure she "uses all the pastry", wasting not a word.
"I am not as prolific as I would like to be, but I've always got up in the early hours, four or fiveish, and written. Up to a point, the business of financial remuneration is crucial, but I don't think it comes into all that many of the things that bring us satisfaction."
Walker's graceful enunciation of the role writing plays in her life answers the question "why write?" with finality. "I see extraordinary writing all the time and everywhere," she says. She believes that, although "there are a lot of people writing a lot, I don't see people whose life has been destroyed because they haven't been published. If something works, then there's a good chance that it will be published."
Like so many other Australian novelists, Walker works as an academic as well as a writer. Despite a recent bout of illness, she has not let up on the steady work towards a new book, a process that's slow but methodical: like a good cook, Walker makes sure she "uses all the pastry", wasting not a word.
"I am not as prolific as I would like to be, but I've always got up in the early hours, four or fiveish, and written. Up to a point, the business of financial remuneration is crucial, but I don't think it comes into all that many of the things that bring us satisfaction."
Walker's graceful enunciation of the role writing plays in her life answers the question "why write?" with finality. "I see extraordinary writing all the time and everywhere," she says. She believes that, although "there are a lot of people writing a lot, I don't see people whose life has been destroyed because they haven't been published. If something works, then there's a good chance that it will be published."
For the page-wearied critic, or the besieged publisher, or even the ever-hopeful reader who has just picked up the latest literary prizewinner, only to discover they are losing interest by the end of the first chapter, the question "why write?" is not as relevant as "why publish?". Why do so many face the uphill climb to get a book into print? Why do huge numbers of people, when asked what they'd most like to do in life, put "write a book" high on the list? And why do those same people feel relaxed about admitting they rarely read a book themselves?
I'm happy being a reader. There's so much to read to have time to write on top! Your blog hasn't helped (with the volume of stuff to get through) either Bookman Beattie.
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