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November 26, 2007

NaNo Days 22, 23, 24, & 25

Day #22:
Thanksgiving Day Off! The day started slow and distracted by this and that. Feeding cats. Drinking coffee. Reading the newspaper and electronic mail. Deciding on paper stock for my poetry chapbook. Getting the priority mail packet ready for sending tomorrow. Stripping the bed sheets. Retrieving bowls and ingredients so J. can make cornbread for the turkey stuffing and Bourbon Spiked Yams we are taking to our Thanksgiving dinner later today. So, I gave myself to have a NaNo day off since I'm close to the word count goal anyway and, truth to tell, novel machinations and logic and plots twists and turns and a conclusion are not really on my mind today. Holiday mode I guess. And the Bob-fest continues: John Wesley Harding and now Time Out of Mind this morning.

Day #23:
J's home from work today so I think this will be another holiday. While the crazy people raise their stress levels with shopping, I'm looking forward to a very calm day. We have errands including sending my manuscript off to the publisher and getting a new battery for the truck. I should have anticipated this novel writing derailment because of holiday energy. It really doesn't matter since I'm far ahead on my word count, basically done if I want to not finesse some kind of respectable ending. No big deal either way. Sun's out, cold, great day for a walk, and taking the bus downtown to see the Bob Dylan movie.

Day #24
More novel shirking. Today was huddling by the gas fireplace, re-reading Bob Dylan's Chronicles: Volume One, before going downtown to meet friends at South Park (restaurant not the T.V. show) for happy hour. And having AAA jump-start the truck and install a new battery. And a nap. And watching the naughty backyard squirrel taunting and teasing my cats. And reading the New Yorker. And a few essays about poetry and poetics. I guess that is the point: it's easy to lose the novel-writing thread when you take a few days off. Maybe Sunday I'll feel like being back in a groove.

Day #25
One more day to not write on the novel project. I'm nearly done so it's been good to let myself take the break. It was sunny and the day got a late start and I'm on the edge of getting a cold or something and it was a good day for a long walk and wrapping white twinkling lights into the rhododendron trees in front of the house. Not inhabiting the minds of imaginary characters. Monday I'll be back "on it" to quote Margene on Big Love.

November 20, 2007

NaNoWriMo: Days 17, 18, 19, 20

NANO DAY #17
Saturday morning, rainy, fog, gray. J. back from his week in DC. We are off to look at houses with a realtor in a couple of hours. I’d like to run errands, stop by the library, maybe see a matinee or make a nice dinner, finish my Kate Atkinson book. So I’m taking at least the morning off, possibly the whole day, from novel-writing. I hate to say this but all that seems much more interesting and fun to me than sitting around adding more words to a shitty novel that will never make it out the running gate. Bad attitude? Or realistic? After reading the interview with Norman Mailer in the most recent Paris Review, I’d say the latter. I guess I am ready for a change...


NANO DAY #18

Low-word count day here as it’s a Sunday morning after a bad night of sleep with wheezing and feeling like I am coming down with a cold. I know that’s no excuse but, between that and the ongoing PMS, I just don’t have the fiction-writing drive inside me today. Sometimes feeling unwell in the body trumps everything else.

Yesterday, I finished One Good Turn, Kate Atkinson’s wonderful (second) Jackson Brodie "mystery" novel. I’m not sure assigning this novel to the Mystery section (as the library has done) does the humor, irony, complexity, and biting social commentary of her work justice. She’s just so good. It makes me want to throw in the towel re: writing even mildly decent fiction and get a lot more honest and real with myself about what I am and am not going to write from here on out.

Meanwhile, the galleys of my poetry book are arriving by priority mail Monday or Tuesday. I have to make sure to make time to celebrate and feel excited about that because, really, it is a milestone and I do feel proud. I did it—thanks to my tenacity and doggedness and a great deal of feedback from L. and B. in our chapbook on-line class. It is still hard to believe I am such a beginner, returning to seriously think about writing poetry barely two years ago and already, to have this book. After all those years struggling with fiction, the rejections and then the eye-opening lesson in all that dreck that is the Tin House unsolicited manuscripts pile. I think I already know the answer about me and fiction—actually, I’ve known for quite some time but remained somehow unwilling to speak it to the world—was that it? Or is it even more difficult and complex, something about me feeling that IF I admit I don’t want to do this—for a ton of carefully considered and defensible reasons, somehow it marks me as a failure. In whose eyes? My own or some other outside of me I shouldn’t be listening to anyway? A voice I should have exorcised long ago?

Still, I’ll continue with NaNoWriMo just for the hell of it. I have to be able to crank out another 10,000 words in the remaining days. Maybe I’ll even have something to show for it by the end. Not that anyone would want to read it!


NANO DAY #19

I think today I’ve finally concluded? realized? accepted? that (of course) I am writing a novel that is more like a collection of linked stories. Which is fine. And what I really loved about many books I read including Joan Silber’s book, Ideas of Heaven. It’s also a way to have more characters who may or may not have to be related (something I love about Kate Atkinson’s books) and a way to tell a story like a kaleidoscope or a necklace, images I used when I was first thinking about doing NaNoWriMo. And it is the kind of fiction I often prefer to read and therefore what kind I should be writing. So maybe my NaNo mess can actually be pared and edited into something, in spite of all my negative feelings about its shapeless idiocy the past week and that this was only an exercise in piloting me back to poetry.

And more realizations. (Again, these have been known for a while but I guess I was in denial or some state of refusing to accept them?

I am not a plodding, plot-driven person. This happened, then this happened, then that. Or what if Mr. A decided to do X to Ms. B and then run away with Mrs. C., what happens then? For some reason writing like that bores me. Not able to fool with the nuances of language enough? Not poetic enough? Not fracturing and bending narrative to stir up questions enough? I don’t mind reading books that do that. Far from it. But the stuff that I learn from, that intrigues me, that I guess I would say are some of my all-time favorites—Ulysses, Proust, Beloved, Michael Ondaatje’s work, Denis Johnson, even Alice Munro—that material hardly follows a straight line.

So a good NaNo morning as I inch close to come kind of end. I suppose if I get to 50K before November 30th, I can keep adding more or go back and see what is salvageable and could work as a coherent whole from what I’ve already done.

NANO DAY #20
I woke, made coffee, wrote in my journal, drank more coffee, worked on the NaNo pages, updated my word count, drank more coffee, and am now turning to the rest of the day. There is sun down south of here in the Willamette Valley; soon, it’s supposed to make an appearance here.

I suppose it feels like an even longer month, a long, lonely novel-writing slog, when you don’t approach this like a party and go to NaNo events and interact with people from your NaNo home region and have a passel of NaNo buddies and, in general, make this Something to Remember rather than the basic Nothing it’s turning out to be for me. Not that I anticipated anything much different. I’m not a socializing writer. I have my routine and then move on to whatever is next in my day. I don’t have a tribe to turn to for therapy or angst-sharing about whether or not I’m doing the work. Even if I did, I’m not sure I would. That said, it would be good to have a handful of friends to call and chat with about this writing life and work. I think that is what could be had by joining a real, functioning writing group here in Portland. I’ll wait and see if the Attic workshop morphs into anything like that. I suppose there’s always placing a note on Craig’s List.

It seems this NaNo is just another excuse to party for some of the participants. To feel connected to and part of something that a collective we are doing, have done, and can wear the T-shirts to prove it. One more attempt to bring together (Internet-enabled) like-minded souls. Except it’s not for me. Because, if there’s one thing that I’ve learned this month it’s that getting to the 50,000 the word count isn’t the problem. I have written, am able to write, have made writing the priority in my life. One of the big issues for me is the why. Why do I think I want to do this? What am I trying to prove? And to whom? And for what? Seems that after my NaNo sessions nearly every one of these twenty days so far, I’ve also spend some time reflecting about these concerns. Soul-searching some might call it. More realistically, it’s an attempt to figure out why something that (increasingly) comes easily to me (the words, not necessarily all the other novel subtleties) is something I don’t enjoy or find fun. I think it’s because I only like the words, that I maybe even hate all the mechanics, all those other novelistic nuances and subtleties. I know, this month we are only supposed to get the words down and out and counted up. And I have obviously done that. But to what end? Is that what my lesson in all of this is? To practice letting go of outcomes? of achievement? Of adding this as another notch on the resume belt?

It seems this NaNoWriMo might be best suited to those who say they want to write (and maybe even do want to write) but never find or make the time. And those who need a kick in the pants to just do it. And those lucky who have a great idea with lots of momentum and energy and need to get it down fast as possible so that it can then become what it is meant to be under revision. And let’s face facts: most of the 50,000 word novels written by would-be novelists this month will suck. Won’t go anywhere. Never needed to be written in the first place. And I definitely would have no interest in reading them. There is (I agree) something to be said for sticking with a project. That, indeed, was a lot of the energy in Chris Baty’s book, No Plot? No Problem. Participate, stick to it, have something to show at the end that says you stuck do it and met your goal. All well and good in terms of the perhaps-Zen-like, in-the-moment, unattached-to-outcomes element of such an endeavor. Not so great in terms of foolishly wasting precious time I could be devoting to other projects, work, etc. Maybe I’m sounding like a tedious 50-something here, what with this obsession with efficient use of the time I’ve got in the “rest of my life”—rather than going with the fun, the flow, the living in the moment. Unfortunately, I’ve been there and done that and it’s in large part why my first book of writing (albeit poetry not fiction) hasn’t come out until now.

I guess thought it would be a useful exercise for me because of the Inner Editor on Vacation part. And, in light of that, it has been. But mostly what I’ve discovered are two things that actually seem in opposition to one another: (1) While it’s relatively easy for me to amass words, that once started and committed to daily writing practice on a subject or even a project, they tumble out. (2) Still, I mostly don’t have any interest in sustaining the interest or drive or energy to figure out to shape them into a novel anyone would ever want to read.

Read my lips: I am not a novelist. Now, can I just accept this fact and (finally, definitively, once and for all) move the hell on?

November 16, 2007

NaNoWriMo: Days 13, 14, 15, 16

DAY #13

You meet your destiny on the road you take to avoid it.
- Carl Jung

That was the peace quote in my e-mail this morning. Much food for thought.

I should be typing these words in one of the rooms at the back of the house because that’s where the sun is pouring in its early morning light, most welcome after yesterdays Sturm und Drang. One cat is on the back of the couch, his perch so he can look out the window at the passing people and cars; the other is curled up in an African basket underneath the coffee table. It’s a much better morning than yesterday and all because of the abundant light.

I actually did two NaNo sessions in one yesterday so, technically, I’m free to have a day off today. Again, I reworked a piece from earlier so it was far from a challenge. So what I’m planning is to do another session this morning, post-cereal and shower. I also need to go through and list all the various chapters I’ve made up in the order I have them to see if 1) there is any narrative flow and sense as to what follows what and 2) figure out what gaps and missing scenes I need to fill in. I actually rather like what feels like a bit of random juxtaposition of these various non-linear bits.

I was noticing that Kate Atkinson does something similar and to quite a strong effect in the novel I’m now reading, One Good Turn. Shell start in a character’s present moment, let’s say Martin the mystery novelist. Then travel back to a field trip to a prison with his writing group, then back to his days at school, then a scene with his agent and finally, back to the present where she has him meet up with Jackson, her main character and now-ex detective. I don’t know about her other readers, but I happily follow her along. I guess its because she gets inside these quirky, flawed people and offers them up with both tenderness and humor.

Anyhow, I am hoping to be surprised and not thoroughly depressed and/or disgusted by what I notice as I scroll back through the 104 pages I’ve somehow already amassed! Novel-in-a-month. Wow!

DAY #14

I wrote for a couple of hours with cold hands and often shivering because I didn’t bother to change out of flannel PJs or to turn on the heat. It must be colder outside today as it stayed about 59 degrees in here in spite of the gas fireplace. Maybe I was able to keep going because I was writing a scene with a campfire in it. Or maybe I lost myself in the continuous, fictional dream as I think John Gardner calls it. All I know is that now its time for a banana smoothie and a hot shower. After that I’ll decide if I want to crank further beyond today’s 1900 words.

It is absolutely great to have the evil Inner Editor on vacation—and necessary for a crazy project like this novel-in-a-month. Otherwise Id have to be worrying that I have at least three narrative threads going at once, all of them flailing about and nowhere near resolved. If I followed every one down its primrose fictional path, I’d have a (most likely unreadable, uninteresting) novel the length of War and Peace. But all that is OK because this is a rough draft, its impossible to write a finished novel in a month, and isnt it with revision that we truly figure out which story we are meant to tell?

It has evolved that it works better for me to dive in, almost helter skelter, into some writing every day and then figure out where it might fit after the fact. Crazy quilt. Necklace with differently-sized and colored beads. An olio, isn’t that the crossword puzzle word, the one that means a stew or cooking pot, a miscellaneous mélange of things? Pick which metaphor for this project works. Of course this means, at least for now, there are many jarring jolts in the flow of the overall book. Big stuff like point-of-view shifts (whose story is this anyway?) and yet-unclarified timelines (just when is this particular scene, chapter, section taking place anyway? and did they really have mobile phones back then?)—that sort of thing. Egregious errors of basic writing craft let alone the requisite attention to detail, but what the hell? Were after word count and not anything that makes any sense, right?

I continue to be amazed at how much writing I’ve done over the years. I have been taking this writing life seriously for quite some time! I suppose I could be distressed that more of it didn’t “go anywhere.” I guess by that I mean getting something published, even though much of what gets published doesn’t sell and isn’t read by much of anyone and ends up on the remainder shelf. Of course, it may be simply that my fiction isn’t good enough. Truth to tell, I find what I write a little boring at times but then I have no desire or inclination (as of yet) to change that.

So maybe I should head back into therapy to sort out why I seem to have had trouble bringing these projects to a satisfying completion. Not that that would mean publication either. Assuming, again, that is the end game in all of why we sit here, typing away, trying to make new worlds with words. I have to resist feeling like a failure because I’ve accumulated all this material and it remains vague and shapeless, incoherent at times and likely full of cliché. If the only thing I get out of this November novel project is acknowledging how much hard work I’ve done to become a better writer over the years, then that will be a good thing.

Also, an insight that occurred to me yesterday: I couldn’t be successfully writing poetry if I hadn’t taken the time to apprentice myself all these to better learn how to be concrete and specific, how to self-edit, how to manage the flow and energy of lines and paragraphs in prose. I may not want to be a novelist, I may no longer care to write (let alone read) short stories but all of this hard work has not been for naught.

Later after more writing:

Maybe it’s the shivering that makes a person stick with the words and do a yeowoman’s extra word count duty on a blustery Wednesday morning. Or maybe it was the sex scene. The first graphic one I’ve let into the novel. I haven’t sorted how much of a sexy, sexual sub-text I want this novel to have. That’s one of the many narrative threads that, for now, is all clouded up. Just keep writing, right, and then when the shapeless blob reaches 50,000 words (which also, hopefully, means some kind of respectable end) then see what plot lines jump out and need further developing, see which characters you really want to spend more time with and learn more about, including all the secrets.

I have too many characters in the draft so far, too. Or at least too many differently-named people to keep track of, and who may or may not matter to the advancement of the story. Today I did a party scene and that required a crowd of attendees. Or so I thought. It will be interesting to read this all through at the end and see what jumps out, what zings. And if, God forbid, I want to continue working with it.

Apparently, there is NaNoEdMo for editing and revision in March. Yikes!

One other item worth noting: a while back, I wrote the following in the “current projects” section on my website, about something I planned to do in 2007:

I’ve returned to my many writings-to-date about the anthracite coal region of northeastern Pennsylvania—where I grew up—as springboard for maybe a new poetry chapbook, Meander.

In many ways, that’s what this near-two weeks of NaNoWriMo has been for me, a revisiting of ideas and themes and fixations about home and exile, about the idea of returning and what repercussions that might have. It seems without meaning too, or even conciously, I’ve begun to work on mining my writing about the place where I grew up.

DAY #15

The halfway mark.
Today was diving into the VISTA house pot luck hippie dinner scene and Hank and Irene taking their first walk down to the river. I should have put on some vintage Neil Young for inspiration but, instead, I worked away. Two+ hours with the laptop on my lap and me sitting in front of the couch with the gas fire roaring (can gas fireplaces roar?) I meet the daily NaNo word count short one word. And Hank has finally begun to woo Irene. If it can be called wooing when you go from a shared joint to the back seat of a junker car.

The NaNo advice that came via e-mail this morning was to jump around, write whatever scenes appeal and worry about how they all fit together later, which is exactly (mostly) what I’ve been doing. I have gone back a few times and looked at my current line-up to see if in any way, shape, or form, it might be said to flow. But I haven’t dwelled on that. Move on, type more, go for more word count. I’m at 37,567 words and 128 pages as of today. Of course, I also went back and looked at the 233 I’d amassed on my grad school novel way back when. A brief skimming through the various sections and I wanted to puke. No wonder no one wanted to publish it. So much of the writing totally sucks. There is something to be said for the wisdom one acquires with age and the continued, so often humbling practice of working with words.

Walter Mosley is definitely right. If you show up and spend a couple hours writing, sooner or later you amass a book. Of course he writes ones about a great character, Easy Rawlins, and his don’t suck and need years of wrenching revision like what I am working on now. But I have been showing up and we are now halfway through the month of November. At this point, I suspect I’ll easily make it to 50,000 words. But will it be interesting, populated with engaging and complex characters? Readable? Will it actually have a coherent plot line or two? A climax? A conclusion?

In the next fifteen days, all that remains to be seen.

NANO DAY #16

Today, Friday, Day #16 of NaNo, past the halfway point, I don’t feel like writing. I’ve been awake an hour and did my journal, found a poem on the Nation website that I read and liked yesterday (before leaving the mag in the rack at the Kennedy School for someone else to find and read) and bought our tickets for our 2008 pilgrimage to the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. Today was the day the first category of our membership was allowed to buy and I wanted to get the jump on good seats.

Very rainy outside this morning. This may be my day off from walking, too. A good day to be in the kitchen making soups, listening to the radio or CDs. Chopping carrots and celery might be just the rhythm my imagination needs in order to get a feeling of where in this damn novel I need to fill in the holes, and where I need to dig deeper.

I can already feel that Irene needs more obsessions—like Jackson Brodie, the main character in Kate Atkinson’s latest books. He’s got his listening to all the soulful country girl singers like Lucinda and EmmyLou and Trisha, moving to France, the basic melancholy dreariness of life once you get to be of a certain middle age. Right now, Irene isn’t fully formed in many sections of the so-called novel. She seems to me to be simply out there, wandering, reacting, mostly observing. Maybe she could be learning Italian—why? Or Meanders little literary angel trying to put her already-read magazines in public places where others will find and perhaps be enlightened by then? Or leaving books to be found—wasn’t there some project that actually encouraged people to do that? Not unlike the “find a red book” treasure hunt that was part of the Wordstock Literary Festival. I’ll have to muse on this more.

As well as ask myself, does this story really need to be told? If yes, why? And why me to tell it? And if yes, whose story is it? what is it really about?

I went through the whole mess a few days ago, charting the rise and fall of action, the connecting between one chapter and the next. I can see it’s easy to lose sight of what you’re accumulating particularly when you are in crank-out-the-words mode. I’m not quite ready to waste printer ink and print out the whole to-date draft. Maybe next week.

A crow is perched on a thick black wire that runs to a telephone pole. Another flies off into the tree across the street. Cars going down 22nd have their lights on, to pierce the gray of this day. I drink my smoothie and ask myself, what would Irene do? But maybe that’s the issue. Maybe I can’t inhabit Irene.

November 12, 2007

NaNoWriMo: Days 9, 10, 11, 12

NaNo Day #9

OK, it’s Friday. And I really and truly did have to go out on errands first thing to see if the local dry cleaner over by the post office on Killingsworth, could get J.’s shirts done by Saturday as he needs them for his trip to DC next week. And, never one to do only one thing while I’m out and about, (especially these days of trying not to drive too much) I also headed up to Acme Mirror on Alberta to get a piece of glass cut and installed in the carved teak frame I got at The Monkey and the Rat a few weeks back. They’re closed on Saturdays which is why that minor project has taken so long. And then I headed out on my adventure to find Joes, formerly G.I. Joes, a sporting goods/outdoor mega-store, to buy another pedometer as mine has gone MIA. All that took about an hour. Then, upon returning, I had a message to call Sharon, the editor of the poetry anthology about bridges that my poem will be appearing in. So I did that. Then, finally, after a few pieces of vegie/cheese corn bread for inspiration, I turned to the novel words.

Earlier this morning, I reviewed some of the pitfalls often experienced in Week #2 of NaNoWriMo in No Plot, No Problem earlier this morning, I had already (tentatively) decided that I might not pick up where I left off yesterday because I was so bored with it and that, to energize myself and continue with the writing, and I might need a character coup. As Chris Baty describes it, a character coup is when you are bored with all your main characters and decided to abandon them or maybe even literally kill them off and let a stranger, quirkier minor character take the lead instead. Which is what I did.

I opened up a file with notes from way back when—a very sketchy freewrite of Irene leaving a bar and going to a cemetery—and started to type. I let Lance Franklin into the scene and now I’m thinking I may just turn the whole damn shapeless sweater mess into the serial murder comedy J. wanted me to write from the beginning, the one about a guy who is killing off everyone who had higher GPAs than him in the high school class so he can be #1 at the next reunion. The good news is I cranked out about half of the daily quote just rambling on about this and that. I may see if, post-lunch, I get a second wind and feel like further fleshing Lance out.

Not to jump the gun—because this NaNo is about the process not the product, let’s not forget—but I have pretty much (already) come to the conclusion that I really do not like working on a novel, that it isn’t my strong suit when it comes to writing. I seem to quickly lose my interest and desire to figure out the whole ball of wax that is creating believeable characters you want to learn more about, have do things, get into difficult situations in which they are forced to make decisions, etc. etc. J. thinks it is because what I’ve been writing is too autobiographical; he may be right. He also says it’s because I can never (have never been able to) envision a story’s ending. All of this is part of why I turned to poetry in the first place two years ago when working on the Gordon book. Shorter projects, ones where you can get a sense of completion, where the sound, word, phrase, line, stanza, syntax, and music are paramount not whether Lance would leave the Mountain Inn, go to the cemetery and stick a knife into Irene. I’m not saying there aren’t characters in poetry or story lines. Just that something different works for me when I’m working with the words that will become a poem.

Still, I’m going to keep going. My word count inched ever so slightly above 20,000 words today. That, in and of itself, says something I guess. That I am good at touch typing? That I know how to use the word count feature on MS Word?

NaNo Day #10

Saturday. Sun’s out. I see smoke from a chimney up the block so maybe that means it’s cold. It’s J.’s last day home before he goes an American Association for the Advancement of Science meeting in DC all next week. There’s a big sale over at the outdoor store formerly known as G.I.Joe’s. We have library books and dry cleaning to retrieve, raking to do, a walk, and an afternoon reconnaissance of the Wordstock Book Fair down at the convention center so I won’t feel so overwhelmed going there alone for my poetry workshop at 4 pm on Sunday.

Who in their right mind would want to stay indoors and write?

After much PMS-induced carping and pewling in my journal pages, I moved on to the words. Today was mostly a cut-and-paste, stream-of-consciousness session. Nothing artful or crafted that’s for sure. I started with an old file of scatterbrained notes, added some narrative to get a character moving from the kitchen to the back porch, then using a “found text”—a very brief story written by C. back in 4th or 5th grade, moving into juxtaposing Irene’s self-indulgent, mixed-up psychic state with some news reports from Afghanistan and Iraq.

So, 1500 words later, I’ve sewn one more square in the patchwork crazy quilt that is my (likely unreadable, uninteresting) NaNoWriMo novel, that’s for sure. I would almost prefer shapeless sweater; at least it’s an item of clothing you might be able to wear. I think that’s probably the best I’m going to be able to do at least for this hormonally-challenged NaNo Week #2. Ramble on, to quote an old Led Zeppelin song.

Meanwhile, here’s something serendipitous and crazy: the theme of Fred Piscop’s November bonus crossword (for those of us who subscribe to the the New York Times puzzle online) is National Novel Writing Month. Guess the event is on the dominant culture radar screen now!

NaNo Day #11


Sunday morning and I got a late start with the NaNo pages because of this and that. I wish I felt more interested in my project. But even if I were working with different material, and a completely different cast of characters and plot line, I don’t think I’d be getting into this. I think writing a novel—at least a traditional-style, linear narrative—just isn’t for me. I’ve known this for a while and it’s a large part of the reason I switched over to memoir and poetry study a few years back. But this experience of showing up to confront the novel demons every day for a month is bringing my insight about the kind of writer I am home.

I suppose I am continuing to do NaNo in spite of this realization partly to prove to myself I can begin and complete, that I can make it to some kind of “ending” because I never did that with my grad school novel-in-progress. But what I have to remember about that project is that, indeed, I went back at least twice and thoughtfully analyzed why that project fizzled out above and beyond the fact that the story itself was boring to me and the process of writing a novel un-fun. Maybe now, once I’ve made it through NaNoWriMo, I can finally put that experience to rest. And move on.

What I also have to remember is that whatever writing I stitch together as part of this NaNo process won’t be for naught. While the NaNo pages might not hold together as a credible novel that anyone in her right mind would ever want to read, the pages can and will be seeds for other writing including poetry. Witness what happened with my poem, Sara’s Eyes. It pretty much grew out of my free writing about Irene and her obsession with an Afghan woman in a New York Times photograph. This was the scene I added to the NaNo novel’s word count yesterday as I work to deepen Irene’s character. I’m sure there will be other passages that I’ll return to and mine for other creative work.

NaNo Day #12

Today’s NaNo themes have been chapter titles and recycling. Since the structure of my novel is, for now, a crazy patchwork quilt, it makes little sense to finalize what section will end up being where. This story is jumping around in time and in and out of the minds of several of the characters, hence the 3rd person omniscient point of view. I have chunked the 88 or so pages into three parts and then tentatively numbered and named the sections (of wildly varying length and completeness, I might add) that I’ve plunked into each of those.

I have had that song by Lesley Gore—it’s my party and I’ll cry if I want to, cry if I want to, cry if I want to, you would cry too if it happened to you—in my head for days only I keep changing the lyrics to suit my situation at the moment. [By the way, what is it in that that last line?] My version for today goes something like this: they’re my words and I’ll use if I want to, use if I want to, use if I want to. You’d use them, too, if they were written by you. So that’s what I’ve done with a bit of editing, tweaking, additional writing, and deleting. Of course, I doubt I have another 22,000 words in the coffers to add to this crazy-ass project so I’m sure I’ll be back on the chain gang slogging away in the matter of a day or two. But for now, I’ve decided to do this.

And just because inquiring minds do want to know what it really is and because the Internet and google make everything literally at our fingertips in this sea of information that, one day, may drown us all, here you go:

IT’S MY PARTY Lesley Gore

Nobody knows where my Johnny has gone
Judy left the same time
Why was he holding her hand
When he’s supposed to be mine

It’s my party, and I’ll cry if I want to
Cry if I want to, cry if I want to
You would cry too if it happened to you

Playin’ my records, keep dancin’ all night
Leave me alone for a while
‘Till Johnny’s dancin’ with me
I’ve got no reason to smile

It’s my party, and I’ll cry if I want to
Cry if I want to, cry if I want to
You would cry too if it happened to you

------ LEAD BREAK ------

Judy and Johnny just walked through the door
Like a queen with her king
Oh what a birthday surprise
Judy’s wearin’ his ring

It’s my party, and I’ll cry if I want to
Cry if I want to, cry if I want to
You would cry too if it happened to you

You know, this Golden Oldie just might be more relevant to some of the story lines in my novel, Personal Effects, that I could have suspected from the fragment that I kept singing to myself. Maybe I should think about changing the title?


September 22, 2005

Work in Progress: Syntax

I started this poem two years ago on a sunny day in late May 2003. It grew out of freewriting exercises that urged you to take strange, not necessarily logical language and see if you could weave it into a poem. Because of that, I don't this think poem is necessarily that successful. It is, however, an important piece to me because, as it turns out, I was writing it the day the last day G. was alive, only I wouldn't know that for another six months. It was the first poetry I'd written in a long time and I remember how much I enjoyed the playing with sounds and words and the memories I'd tried to capture. It still needs work and I think, soon, I'll be ready to get back to it. Meanwhile, even if it's not finished or muddled and muddied and incomprehensible, I post it now so at least these words find a place in the world.


Syntax

I judged books by their covers,
the shape of feet and hands.
One particular night is
a farmhouse heated with wood,
my two-year-old asleep in an adjoining room.
Candle burns to a stub,
makes a pass at the sun,
at our sad nest
of hearts. I climb on top,
the man on the bottom
gives in.

Back on Girl Scout craft day,
cotton loops become
hot pads on a metal frame.
In the grownup life, the wail of
the vacuum drowns out
trace of the human race.

Bent knuckle syntax,
give me the nouns and verbs,
the glottal stops and dipthongs that
once and for all, explain.
How the dream wakes up and stumbles
into a dark, eternal down.
How grief makes exclusive use of
the question mark.
How people—certainly me, definitely you
hanging from that tree the day after I wrote this—
remain forever in hot pursuit of
the easiest way out.

June 20, 2005

Summer Haiku

We're edging into the solstice, the start of summer. These poems were written a couple years ago but my days this summer will likely be much the same:

Fog crowds the foothills—
August and an alien rain.
Log trucks hiss then dance.


Dawn’s pink blue rising
is a window shade pulled up,
clouds descending down.


Green metal lawn chairs
for studying the garden
breathe sap, exhale rust.


Dahlias drink in sunlight.
Hummingbirds flit by the
red begonia.


Ice in a puddle,
crumbs a slice of lunchtime on
a chipped yellow plate.