January 2012
17 posts
17 tags
Semi-Late Bloomer: Alice Munro
Alice Munro, a perennial contender for the Nobel Prize. Generally regarded as one of the world’s foremost writers of fiction. Her reputation as a short-story writer is international. As Cynthia Ozick put it, “our Chekhov.” -wikipedia Alice Munro never meant to be a short-story writer. She’d aimed for sprawling novels. But when it came down to it, there just wasn’t...
Jan 26th
23 notes
14 tags
Ned Hepburn
Ned Hepburn has worked with/for Interview, Black Book, Vice, MTV news, Thought Catalog, Bust, National Geographic Channel.  I wrote to him and asked how he got started as a freelance writer and what’s his writing routine. He wrote back to me! “Right now, not many people are paying for writing, which is terrible. But the doors are wide open, as long as you don’t mind the shitty...
Jan 21st
104 notes
17 tags
Vladimir Nabokov
Vladimir Nabokov wrote most of his novels, including Lolita and Pale Fire, on index cards.  His novel Ada, for example, wound up taking over 2000 cards.   In a 1967 Paris Review interview, Nabokov says, “The pattern of the thing precedes the thing.  I fill in the gaps of the crossword at any spot I happen to choose.  These bits I write on index cards until the novel is done.  My schedule is...
Jan 18th
55 notes
25 tags
LATE BLOOMERS: Raymond Chandler
At 20, Chandler became a reporter. He was an unsuccessful journalist, published reviews and continued writing romantic poetry. Accounting for that time he said, “Of course in those days as now there were clever young men who made a decent living as freelancers for the numerous literary weeklies, but I was distinctly not a clever young man. Nor was I at all a happy young man.”   He...
Jan 16th
118 notes
23 tags
Hunter S. Thompson
Do you worry about Plagiarism?  No, I pride myself with having the wisdom and taste to steal from the right people: Conrad, Fitzgerald, the Marquis de Sade, Prescott, Isak Dinesen, Coleridge, Twain, Pee Wee Herman—that swine. I learn from these people. Especially the dead ones. 
Jan 14th
132 notes
16 tags
Wes Anderson
Writing on my own is not fun for me. With Life Aquatic, Noah (Baumbach) and I would meet every day at a restaurant before lunch and we’d stay six or seven hours till dinner. We’d make each other laugh. That’s how we got it done….I am surprised because I always think of myself as someone who tries to do a lot of stuff and who is lazy. So I am happy to learn I can actually...
Jan 14th
177 notes
13 tags
Gabriela Mistral (first female lit nobel prize...
I write on my knees, the desk table has never been of any use to me—not in Chile, Paris, or Lisbon.  I write during the morning or night.  The afternoon has never given me any inspiration; I do not understand the reason for its sterility or lack of desire for me.   I believe that I have never written a verse in a closed room or in a room facing a drab wall of a house. I always seize a piece...
Jan 13th
26 notes
8 tags
Yusef Komunyakaa
Yusef Komunyakaa wrote back to me!  This makes up for being rejected by Leonard Nimoy.  Here’s his amazing response about how he writes:  I don’t have to think about writing. I just write. I keep a yellow notepad beside the bed and in the middle of the night or in the early morning I scribble down a word, a few lines, sometimes pages. Writing, for me, is an improvisation on an image or a...
Jan 10th
89 notes
15 tags
Stephen Hawking
“In a moving address, Prof Hawking described how his diagnosis with motor neuron disease at 21 had helped transform him from a gifted but lazy student into one of the world’s most eminent academics. The professor admitted he had worked for just an hour a day while an undergraduate at Oxford, but said the news of his condition spurred him on to complete his PhD and become an academic. ...
Jan 10th
85 notes
organic-hummus-dip asked: what is the theme for this blog
Jan 6th
2 notes
14 tags
James Cameron
At the beginning of any writing project is the agonizing period of nebulous ideas. Trying to will a world into existence. I circle around it, nibbling at the edges, writing notes [sometimes for years]. Then slowly a change happens. Without warning, it becomes easier to write a scene than to write notes about the scene. I start sticking words in the mouths of characters who are still...
Jan 5th
13 notes
12 tags
James Franco
This is an aside about James Franco that goes along with what Steve Martin was saying about sitting in your trailer a lot.  “I’ve often heard it expressed that he must be a mountebank, since no single person could be doing as many things as he does. How could he possibly be simultaneously reading for a Yale Ph.D and filming a multimillion-dollar motion picture? I’ve wondered the same thing...
Jan 5th
18 notes
14 tags
Steve Martin
“I was very vulnerable to criticism for many years. I could read a bad review and remember it my whole life. One day, in the early ’90s, my play was opening for the third time in Chicago. This free press paper gave it a terrible, terrible review, saying, “It’s horrible this type of play gets put on and keeps other good writers from getting their play put on.” And I looked at the...
Jan 5th
13 notes
16 tags
Amy Hempel
I used to write only at night. All night, with a Walkman on. Did that for the first book. Much of the second book. Now there’s too much I have to get done in the day. You try not to be precious about it. An average day includes around two hours of writing writing, about six miles of dog walking (which also counts as writing), a lot of time on E-mail, a movie, some forensics shows, and CNN to see...
Jan 4th
12 notes
11 tags
Maya Angelou
It begins at 5:30 in the morning.  After showering, she leaves the house, preferring to write somewhere else.   “I keep a hotel room.  I have everything taken off the walls, and I bring in yellow pads, a Roget’s Thesaurus, a dictionary, a bible, a deck of cards, crossword puzzles and a bottle of sherry (red wine).  When I approach the door, it is with utter apprehension and...
Jan 3rd
23 notes
17 tags
Rejection
Mr. Nimoy wishes you good luck with your blog and he thanks you for your interest, but his routine varies greatly and he is unable to comply. 
Jan 2nd
3 notes
11 tags
Eckhart Tolle
“A summary of how Eckhart Tolle writes:  1. Stillness 2. Awareness of thoughts as they arise 3. Write, or if the thought is not relevant or useful, wait in stillness for the next one” 
Jan 2nd
4 notes