Daily Archives: July 22, 2002

Surprise Novel Attack

I’m not quite sure what I expected, but my triumphant return to creative writing wasn’t supposed to creep up on me like this.

Out of the blue yesterday afternoon, the words “What makes a great Canadian novel?” floated through my mind, and all of a sudden I was scrambling for my laptop. Four hours later, I had eight pages of something new on my screen. I don’t know what it is yet – a long short story, a novella, the seeds of something larger; I was too amazed to think that far ahead.

I used to write constantly. I’d hear a bit of dialogue, or get a flash of a visual, and away I’d go. I would have to explain the context to myself, come up with where it had come from, where it was going. I loved to write. I wrote on buses, in the back of history classes, in the backyard, in the middle of the night when I woke up.

I lost it, though, about eight years ago. I might connect it to several things: an increase in theatre, the end of my BA and the beginning of my MA, more hours at work, taking up the cello. The end result, though, was less and less words on paper that had nothign to do with Browning, Dickens, or Byatt. My creativity was being funneled into a variety of different places instead. I tried to force myself back into it about five years ago, but it was difficult, and I’m not sure when I stopped.

All I know is, I miss it. I miss having that bubbling idea surfacing and demanding a context. I miss the excitement of discovering characters, finding out what happens next in their lives.

Ceri and I made a deal: a certain amount of pages and hours spent writing per week, to be reported at a weekly coffee date. Perhaps years of MA-ing have convinced me that I’m not a creative writer any longer, for I look at half-finished stories left languishing for half a decade and I can see that they’re good, but I can’t finish them. Instead, I produce non-fiction, which is solid, but doesn’t nourish the soul in the same fashion.

Now, however, I remember. I remember the glee with which I reach for paper and pen. Part of me watches in astonishment as the words roll onto the screen. It’s the permission I give myself to drop what I’m doing and leap for the notebook, assuring the little creative spark left in my brain that it can come up with ideas, it’s more than welcome to, and look how important I think it is, I’m ceasing all activity and paying attention to it, the dear thing, because what it has to say to me is important.

I can’t stop thinking about my characters. Everything I see, everything I think, becomes a part of their world too. How would they act in this situation? What would they say? How would it resonate with their particular pasts, and their psyches?

I’m excited again, which is thrilling in and of itself. I’m excited about the feeling, the product, the rediscovered ability, the passion.

I think I’ll buy a new pen today.