Well, do you?
Yes, I guess I can, according to you at least. And thank you for that kudo.
What makes a good write or writer? Is it innate, a talent born like a savant or is it just hard work and interest?
The short answer is...both. But it's more than that. It's paying attention. Paying attention for a
looong time. Your whole life, in fact. You've gotta pay attention the whole time, to all of it, everything. And then you gotta be able to transcribe that...in a way that's universal, so everyone who reads you gets it. And you gotta be okay with it when everyone doesn't. Because they never will. But if one person does, then you've achieved the most you can hope to achieve. And beyond that, you gotta be willing and able to do the hard work. The hard work to get it out there. Because if you aren't or don't...who gives a rip?
The Story, by Brandi Carlisle, speaks to this for me..."...because these stories don't mean anything/when you got no one to tell them to. It's true..." So the story ain't everything. The hard work is something, too.
Are all writers/poets doomed to write? Are they compelled? Is it a leisurely pursuit, a hobby like gardening?
Fist question...Yes. Second question...Yes. Third question...Yes, for some.
Must one be witty or clever to write well? What makes a genius at the keyboard, someone you read, over and over again?
First question...Depends on what they're writing. If they're writing humor, God help them if they're not. Secend question...Someone who pays attention, in my opinion. Paying attention gives your writing that universality that's necessary to garner that "over and over" read. It has to extend beyond your own personal frame of reference. If it doesn't, your audience it limited at best. You have to be able to empathize, even when it is outside your own experience, in order to have your writing carry that universal appeal.
Do writers all have a muse? Is there someone or something that stimulates their creativity...sets them on the path, the flow, the stream of write?
This is the Big Question, is it not? Who can answer? Who knows? I know that I read a book about Tolkien once, long ago, in which he described in a letter toa friend how he had no idea where Sam and Frodo were, what was up with them, how they would survive the travel through Mordor, what would transpire. Stephen King, in
On Writing, says he has know idea howit happens, where it comes from, who's doing it. He says only that it feels, while he's writing, like it's not him doing it, like it's coming through him but not from him. This hit a chord with me when I read it. It's like that for me, too. I have even described it as rape. Like someone is raping me, using me, forcing me to do something not so much painful, but unsavory at times. It doesn't always feel good. But I do it anyway. Because I
have to.
Write right? Right wrongs? Write on, right?
Right. Because anything less would be like...like death.
To not write words is to die.
Manuscript
Man-u-script
Man You Write
The written man.
Word.
Peace,
Barry