R. Garcia's Website
  • Home
  • Documents
    • Fiction
    • Poetry and Poetry-Related
    • Humor
    • Essays
    • Photographs
  • Blog: The Eclectic Life
  • Quotes
  • Books
    • The Sun Zebra
  • : ^ )
    • Fun Quotes
    • Rolando's Official Web Mascot
    • Cool Videos
    • The Power of Words
    • Odd and Fantastic Pictures
  • Contact

Harlan Ellison on writers taking up plumbing

11/10/2012

0 Comments

 
There is a scene in Stanley Ellin’s first novel, The Winter After This Summer, in which a young guy being tossed out of college stops by to have a last drink with a favorite professor, and the older man says to the kid, “What are you going to do now? What do you want to be?” And the kid thinks about it for a moment and replies, “Well, I don’t want to be a writer.” And the professor toasts him, saying, “That’s good. There are already too many people around who mistake a love of reading for a talent for writing.” And that is my advice to young writers, too. Forget it. Take up plumbing or electrical wiring. The money is vastly better, and the work-hours are more reasonable, and when your toilet overflows, you don’t want Dostoevsky coming to your house.

So when I teach workshops, or lecture to “writers’ groups,” I do my best to discourage as many as possible. This is in no way an attempt to lessen the competition, because I truly, deeply believe that writers are not in competition with each other. What I write, Joyce Carol Oates can’t write; what Ms. Oates writes, Donald Westlake can’t write; and what Kafka did has already been done, all that Hemingway bullshit about “pulling against Chekhov and that all time fast gun heavyweight puncher Tolstoy” notwithstanding. (Hemingway meant, it is now generally accepted, not that one had to go mano-a-mano with any other writer, but that in the words of John Simon—”there is no point in saying less than your predecessors have said.”)

In the burning core of what I believe to be true about the art and craft of writing, I know that one cannot discourage a real writer. Like von Kleist, “I write only because I cannot stop.” And that is the way of it for a real writer, not for the fuzzyheaded dreamer or parvenu who thinks it’s an easy way to make fame and fortune. You can break a real writer’s hands, and s/he will tap out the words with nose or toes. Anyone who can be discouraged, should be.  They will be happier and more useful to the commonweal as great ballerinas, fine sculptors, sensitive jurists, accomplished historians, imaginative historians.

0 Comments

Your comment will be posted after it is approved.


Leave a Reply.

    I am a trader of jacks and a jack of all trades!
    Do you like this blog? You can have links to blog posts delivered to your e-mail address. Please click here.
    Picture
    Follow Phantomimic on Twitter

    RSS Feed

    Categories

    All
    Advice For Writers
    Arrogance
    Best Sellers
    Books
    Buying A House
    Capacity To Astonish
    Cats
    Censorship
    Children
    Courage
    Creativity
    Fear Of Writing
    Fiction
    First Draft
    Getting Better At Writing
    Novels
    Nude
    On Writing
    Painting
    Panic
    Plagiarism
    Poetry
    Pornography
    Public
    Publishers
    Readers
    Reader's Rights
    Rejection
    Rewriting
    Self Publishing
    Self-Publishing
    Success & Failure
    Sun Zebra
    The Word
    Trouble
    Vanity
    Vocabulary
    Words
    Writer
    Writers
    Writers Drinking
    Writer's Enemies
    Writers Spying
    Writing
    Writing Days
    Writing Ideas

    Archives

    January 2015
    October 2013
    February 2013
    January 2013
    December 2012
    November 2012
    October 2012
    September 2012
    August 2012
    July 2012
    June 2012
    May 2012
    April 2012
    March 2012
    February 2012
    January 2012
    December 2011
    November 2011
    September 2011
    August 2011
    July 2011
    June 2011
    May 2011
    April 2011

    RSS Feed

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.