Today's selection -- from Daily
Rituals by Mason Currey. We sadly note the passing of the highly
esteemed Maya Angelou, and include below her own description of her writing
habits.
"Angelou has never been
able to write at home. 'I try to keep home very pretty,' she has said, 'and I
can't work in a pretty surrounding. It throws me.' As a result, she has
always worked in hotel or motel rooms, the more anonymous the better. She
described her routine in a 1983 interview:
' I usually get up at about
5:30, and I'm ready to have coffee by 6, usually with my husband. He goes off
to his work around 6:30, and I go off to mine. I keep a hotel room in which I
do my work -- a tiny, mean room with just a bed, and sometimes, if I can find
it, a face basin. I keep a dictionary, a Bible, a deck of cards and a bottle
of sherry in the room. I try to get there around 7, and I work until 2 in the
afternoon. If the work is going badly, I stay until 12:30. If it's going
well, I'll stay as long as it's going well. It's lonely, and it's marvelous.
I edit while I'm working. When I come home at 2, I read over what I've
written that day, and then try to put it out of my mind. I shower, prepare
dinner, so that when my husband comes home, I'm not totally absorbed in
my work. We have a semblance of a normal life. We have a drink together and
have dinner. Maybe after dinner I'll read to him what I've written that day.
He doesn't comment. I don't invite comments from anyone but my editor, but
hearing it aloud is good. Sometimes 1 hear the dissonance; then I try to
straighten it out in the morning.'
"In this manner, Angelou
has managed to write not only her acclaimed series of autobiographies but
numerous poems, plays, lectures, articles, and television scripts. Sometimes
the intensity of the work brings on strange physical reactions -- her back
goes out, her knees swell, and her eyelids once swelled completely shut.
Still, she enjoys pushing herself to the limits of her ability. 'I have
always got to be the best,' she has said. 'I'm absolutely compulsive, I admit
it. I don't see that's a negative.' "
Daily Rituals: How Artists
Work
Author: Mason Currey
Publisher: Alfred A. Knopf
Copyright 2013 by Mason Curry
Pages: 122-124
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