author hitching a ride to the next level |
"When are you coming out with another book?" Writers
write and between starting page one of a new story, on the one hand, and
getting to the level of the three possibilities above, on the other, can be a
long road. Some writers or novels take years to reach completion. That's the
art and the trade.
In my case, 2012 was a prolific year,
getting a half dozen stories, including my first novel, traditionally published,
some in journals, anthologies and a magazine. But it's been two years since the
last story was published. What does that mean?
"Weren't you working on something new?" Friends
who are unfamiliar with the art might be thinking other things when they ask
this. Was he a one-hit wonder? Is he burned out? Out of ideas? Were reviews and
sales so bad that he decided he's not very good at writing and so he quit?
While any of these could be true, often the answer is more complicated and
might make you wonder why writers subject themselves to this art, to begin
with.
"What are you working on now?" Again in
my case, I spent the last two years writing: A new, children's book. A new YA
novel. A new Sci-Fi story. And also revising: A southwestern SciFi/Fantasy
novel. A southwestern fantasy. A Mexican fantasy novella. And several other
fiction and nonfiction pieces. Few have been accepted for publication, though
all of them are in front of publishers, contest judges or literary agents.
That's mostly how I spent the two years, as far as actual writing.
"I hear that so-and-so got another one published."
Underlying this question might be another, unspoken one. There can be great
contrasts between you and other writers, Latino or otherwise. There are some
who are literally getting at least a short story published every month or so.
Are they better writers than me? Possibly, probably and quién sabe. Also, qué
importa? Every writer keeps writing, not losing heart, not beating his pen in
the dirt. Good writing is not necessarily as obvious as a good painting. You
can sometimes easily see that one artist is "better" than another. At
the same time, beauty is in the eye of the purchaser, so there's no accounting
for taste, too.
"Why don't you just self-publish and keep all the money for
yourself?" Self-publishing would obviously keep my writing in
front of possible readers. But I, and others, don't have much time for this.
Writing is what we're supposed to get good or getting great at. Self-promotion
is a whole different dinosaur.
For my debut novel, I spent months
preparing to promote it, spent thousands flying to conferences and bookstores
to conduct readings and signings and also had promotional materials produced
that cost money. The months' drain on me was incredible. I was quite lucky to
have patrons who assisted me in that, since the book hasn't strained my
publisher's bank account. Every writer needs to promote themselves, but
self-promotion can be its own addiction.
Out of that, I not only came to a
decision that self-publishing would add too much more work and time that would
take me away from writing. I also decided I needed to attempt to scale the
publishing ladder and reach agents and companies that could do more of the work
of promotion, with their money. Raising the bar contributed to my two-year
climb, with more months to come.
"Has your writing won any awards?" During the
public absence of new, published works, how else do writers spend their time? For
me, other tasks came up that required my attention. For instance, my novel The Closet of Discarded Dreams received
honorable mention from the International Latino Book Awards in 2013. The
organization made cover stickers available to put on our books.
They also suggested that all "winners"
should use AWA, Award Winning Author, in our literary biographies. I wrestled
with that idea and decided, not. AWA, to me and probably others, sounds like my
novel took 1st, 2nd or 3rd place, which it didn't. That may be a technicality,
but I prefer to either be specific about what the novel won, or not use AWA and
wind up disappointing someone when they learn that the novel only received
honorable mention.
"Are you making any money writing?" I also volunteered
to teach writing in inner-city, non-hipster or -charter schools. That keeps me
in touch with some of my intended, new audience, like English-language
learners, for instance. The work also meets part of my responsibility to
pay-forward what I can and use what I've learned to help develop young or new
writers.
a garden project, made from recycled wood |
"What do you as a writer do for fun?" For most
writers, writing is more fun than climbing mountains, skiing or scuba diving.
But, all writing and no fun might make for a boring writer. When weather
permitted--which can be a joke in global-warmed Colorado--I spent afternoons
working on wood projects. Designing and building furniture out of salvaged or
repurposed wood. The tactical, physical exercise strokes the brain and
imagination in ways that a keyboard can't. Sanding away for hours can produce
new stories or characters in surprising ways. I'd recommend some type of more
physical art--whether it's gardening or landscaping or painting or
whatever--for any writers who find themselves in a screen-burn rut.
"Why aren't you in a writing group?" No. I
spent over a year in the Northern Colorado Writers Workshop and benefitted incredibly
from participating. I recommend joining a writers' group or workshop to any
beginning or aspiring writer. After my time with NCWW, I elected to not join
another group because I believed it had pushed me up to the next level. From
there, I am going it alone, for the time being. If I did join a group, it would
specifically need to include some Chicanos, focus on children's/YA lit, and have
writers who are interested in speculative literature. That's just my
best-choice decision.
"Why don't you show me what you're working on?" Not all
writers enjoy reading their WIPs to other people. A Work-in-Progress means it's
not perfect, complete, totally ready. I don't mind that. Almost weekly, I try
sharing passages from my WIPs with whoever has the patience to hear and comment
on them. If you're in Denver on almost any Friday, drop me a line, come on by
and you can join in, sometimes with other writers sharing their work.
"What else you been doing, besides writing?" These are
not all the activities writers engage in between writing conferences, public
readings and debuting their new works. Hours, days of preparation, research, interviews,
typing, mailing and some thought keep us busy. Until we hear that one of our
unpublished works has been accepted. And will be in print. And that we'll have
to do book signings. In my case, that's also the time to break open a new
bottle and give a toast to the two years spent getting there. We'll see how
soon the next one happens.
So, the next time you ask
questions of a writer, you can assume a lot is boiling inside their pots, even
if you can't smell how picoso it is, yet.
To aspiring writers, I'll suggest, now go "Make
good art," like Gaiman said. Be a "writer who knows the difference between the
production of a commodity and the practice of an art," as Ursula Le Guin put
it. Or take the words of the fabulous Chicano poet, Lalo Delgado, as a
challenge and help mentor an aspiring writer:
"stupid
america, hear that chicano
shouting curses on the street,
he is a poet without paper and pencil
and since he cannot write
he will explode."
Es todo, hoy, but maybe mucho is
coming,
RudyG, a.k.a. the "AWA"
Rudy Ch. Garcia, who doesn't consider himself that. Yet.
2 comments:
AWA echoes a baby's cry for agua, so here's wishing you a deluge, keeping your head above AWA.
Thanks for the shower, Em.
RudyG
Post a Comment