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:
The Postings:
Thursday, September 25, 2008
William Faulkner:
"Memory believes before knowing remembers. Believes longer than recollects, longer than knowing even wonders."
-- William Faulkner
*
"Happy Birthday, Mr. Faulkner," Eleanor says. She's baked a cake filled with everything she believes -- all of it, even the parts of her life she has not lived yet ... the chapters that still need to be written before any of it becomes fuzzy.
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6 comments:
This blog has been included in this weeks FIVE FOR FRIDAY on AsTheCrackerheadCrumbles. I hope you like the image I featured, and I hope this attracts many visitors.
http://asthecrackerheadcrumbles.blogspot.com/2008/09/five-for-friday_26.html
Sir FishHawk,
We are grateful for your inclusion.
Eleanor is baking another cake, in your honor.
And to our readers, we recommend that you give Sir FishHawk's site a look (and a bookmark).
Geoff & Eleanor
I am deeply honored. Will there be some fresh mangoes to eat with Eleanor's cake?
Eleanor says: "Dear Sir FishHawk -- we will certainly try to serve some fresh mangoes with your cake. I hope that Will Amante arrives in time for the party. He's traveling from some exotic place -- he never says where (he likes to be secretive like that), but he always has those wonderful mangoes."
Billy F. remains in a league by himself, seemingly more untouchable with each passing year. I especially love his observation about rewriting, and how it involves going back and "killing my little beauties." I often think of that resonant phrase as I'm rewriting myself.
Thanks for your comment, John. For me, the act/art of revision is a rather pleasant exercise -- much like sculpting a mass of good words into the words that really need to be there. Sometimes I make a wrong turn, but the old words lurk in the subconscious -- hoping for another turn ... or turn of phrase.
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