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Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label writing. Show all posts

Monday, April 7, 2014

An inspiration to writers everywhere

A tribute in the form of a "puzzler" to the writer of one of my favourite books by one of my favourite authors, whose weekly e-newsletter I receive every Sunday:


HOPE BEGINS IN THE DARK

By Dr Mardy Grothe

On April 10, 1954, this writer was born in San Francisco (she turns 60 this week). Her father was a full-time writer and an avid reader, and she acquired both passions at an early age. As a second-grader, she was thrilled when one of her poems won an award in a statewide poetry competition and was later published in a mimeographed anthology.

She struggled with a host of problems during adolescence, but continued to dream of a literary career.  She dropped out of college at age nineteen, hoping to write the great American novel, but ending up instead in a variety of low-level jobs.

She continued to force herself to write almost every night for the next few years.

And then, at age twenty-three, her father was diagnosed with brain cancer. He told her to pay attention during his illness, and also to take notes, adding, "You tell your version, and I am going to tell mine." He ultimately became too sick to write his own story, but three years later, she published Hard Laughter (1980), a novel based in part on his illness. Her father died a year before the book was published.

In 1986, she became a highly unconventional born-again Christian (liberal, feminist, and pro-choice), got clean and sober, and began to take her life and career more seriously.

OUR MYSTERY AUTHOR WITH OPRAH WINFREY.

In 1993, she achieved her first commercial success with Operating Instructions: A Journal of My Son's First Year. A fiercely honest and occasionally very funny memoir about life as a single mother, the book had a modest initial press run of 7,000 copies, but became a surprise bestseller.

In 1994, she wrote another bestseller, Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life. I received it as a gift many years ago, and it continues to be one of my favourite books.

Like her earlier Operating Instructions book (and her many later ones), Bird by Bird is filled with disarming self-revelations and charming self-deprecating humour.

It is also a deeply personal work, containing many insights and lessons learned. In the book's Introduction, she reflected on her early years as a struggling writer, and especially about the many times she would force herself to write at night after working all day at an exhausting and unfulfilling job. She wrote:

   Hope begins in the dark, the stubborn hope that if you just
    show up and try to do the right thing, the dawn will come.

Who is this woman?


Now you know!
  • A copy of this highly useful book, which is filled with practical advice, has been placed in the Commits library.

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Why the writer should be considered the "hero" of a film, any film

An excerpt from a fascinating, penetrating, and rib-tickling interview with Billy Wilder ("The Art of Screenwriting", by James Linville, 1996):

BILLY WILDER AND HIS SIX OSCARS.

THE INTRODUCTORY PARAGRAPH
Billy Wilder, one of American cinema's premiere writer-directors, has always maintained that movies are "authored", and has always felt that much of a film's direction ideally should take place in the writing. Like many of the medium's great filmmakers, Wilder began his career as a writer, yet he is unique in the extent of his involvement in the development of the material he has directed. Indeed, he has cowritten all twenty-four of his films.

THE BIG QUESTION
The interviewer: Film really is considered a director's medium, isn't it?

THE EXPLOSIVE ANSWER
Billy Wilder: Film's thought of as a director's medium because the director creates the end product that appears on the screen. It's that stupid auteur theory again, that the director is the author of the film. But what does the director shoot — the telephone book?

And that's only the first three lines from Wilder's response, which is a few hundred words long. The interview itself takes all of 23 pages in a brilliant compilation, The Paris Review Interviews: Vol. 1. Each of the 16 interviews with creative geniuses ranging from Truman Capote and Ernest Hemingway to Billy Wilder and Robert Gottlieb is worth the price of the book. Buy it now.
  • Here are just a few of the 24 films Billy Wilder has directed (and co-written): The Front PageSome Like It Hot; Sunset Boulevard; Double Indemnity; The Apartment. I have ordered the first two from Amazon the DVDs should be arriving tomorrow, so that takes care of my weekend viewing.

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

"I want a job that does not involve reading, writing, or thinking. What to do?"

MY FACEBOOK STATUS UPDATE TODAY:
3 hours ago ·
I have become acquainted with some young people who want a job that does not involve reading, writing, or thinking. Any recommendations?