To Reach The Green Light At The End Of The Pier

FOR AS LONG AS IT TAKES: "We are saving ourselves through the words," says Eleanor, the leading lady of a novel-in-progress. This exploration into the creative process -- which includes plenty of distractions/tangents /thoughts & rants by Eleanor, her Biographer, and selected guest artists -- will continue until Eleanor is certain her story is "right." (But we dare not jump ahead of ourselves.)

There will be the occasional typo (as Eleanor points out), and much of this is intended to be "original draft" -- what comes out of our mouths (heads) first, and then set down in that order. Not all of it will be included in the novel, but all of it is happening in real time.

The Postings:


Thursday, March 6, 2008

Typewriter In My Head


The old, manual Remington typewriter in my head is clickety-clacking away as the brain cells jump from one letter to the next. Lots of stuff going on up there, apparently. You know, inside my head, near the typewriter. On the typewriter.


We have reached the higher numbers (three paragraphs just went by skipping rope), and brain cell Number 86, cigarette dangling from his lips like he's Ring Lardner, Jr. or something, is calling for an all-out revision on Chapter 4 (86 the damn thing! 86 it already!), while brain cell Number 152 says, It's just right, leave it alone. I love imperfection. I'm an imperfectionist!

(Turns out brain cell Number 152 is also a smoker, and he's sitting on the "M" key, which made it awfully difficult to type that just then. Just now, I mean. Present tense, past tense -- it's all flitting by too quickly.) He's puffing these beautiful little circles into the air, like he's king of the mountain, which might explain where he's perched. "M" for mountain. "M" for meatball. "M" for martini.

Brain cell Number 216 just chimed in, There's a whole lot of second-hand smoke coming my way. He's on the "K" key. (Thanks Number 216, for forcing me to carefully avoid you while typing "K." There, it happened again.) (What happened again?) (Those paragraphs, skipping rope. Five of them this time. They multiply, and then you cut them out like coupons.)

The brain cells are on overdrive, and whatever their vices (Number 108 is checking out her reflection from the "D" key to the "R" key), they seem to get along well enough, second-hand smoke and vanity aside.

Give me an "E!" cries out brain cell Number 334. Give me an "L!" cries out a drunk brain cell Number 296. And so forth.

They spell out "Eleanor," and Eleanor, you might guess, is pleased.

"Your brain cells are going manic," Eleanor says, "so don't you dare lose this moment."

I won't, I assure her.


1 comment:

Bryan C Crook said...

I just came across your typed words for the first time. Even without the time in this moment to read your type, I feel a shared way of coming across.

I will be back in time, with more moments to spend with your typed self, and thank you for what I've come across.

ELEANOR says: "Please turn the page. Keep reading."

For more of Eleanor and her Biographer -- as well as the work of our many guest artists -- check out the older postings. "Everything is part of the process, and the process is the journey," Eleanor says.



"The Little Room," Olive Thomas In Background

"The Little Room," Olive Thomas In Background