I really am still writing. When Lori was over on Tuesday, after the crocheting, I revised a difficult part of one of the chapters in AP, very satisfying. I'm currently about six chapters of revision from the end, in theory. Hoping to pound through a few of them on this coming Tuesday afternoon, when she comes again. If we don't spend the whole time crocheting. But that won't happen, right? (Hey, Simone, what are you doing Tuesday afternoon? :-)
And in other news, I've started writing another book. Hah! It is to laugh, or cry, I'm not sure. That makes how many books in progress?
- Arbitrary Passions -- memoir/travelogue, close to done
- Rasathi -- YA fantasy, three quarters-done, but I kind of want to rip out half of it and redo it with a better protagonist
- Writing Your Identity -- writing book, maybe one-quarter drafted; sort of stalled out during busy semester
- Kamala -- literary novel, one tiny chapter written; need to do masses of war research before I'm really comfortable writing this one; god, a grant would be helpful here, giving me a teaching release so I can travel, interview soldiers, and have research time. Must apply for grants.
- The Arrangement -- literary novel on back burner, completed, but I think I may want to go back and revise it at some point before it goes out on the market again
- Domestic -- new book!
One unfortunate consequence though is that I won't be posting new poems on my site as I normally would -- I'll be sending them out, hoping to get them published first. It feels a bit unnerving to do this; I don't generally think of myself as a serious poet. The thought terrifies me a little bit, actually. But sometimes you have to just follow where the writing takes you.
A couple of people have been giving me career advice lately, about these questions of writing critical papers or YA fantasy or what-have-you. And the advice all boils down to the same advice I gave some parents at Beth's 40th birthday party last night, when they told me that their brilliant fifteen-year-old daughter wanted to write, and what did I think she should write about? I told them she should write what she feels passionate about. She should write what she loves and hates and can't stop thinking and talking about. I know this is the right choice when writing. It's funny that I need to hear it from other people to start believing it for myself again.
This is a poem someone wrote for me in the rec.arts.poems newsgroup, about fifteen years ago. Sorry it took me so long, Ralph. I'm going to try to do better now.
Your resistance to being perceived as a strong effective poet
perhaps some residue
from a time
perhaps a lifetime
when you felt
hampered
wounded
weakened
not what something within you said you should be
it is not up to you
the truthfulness of your heart
all you can do is foster it
impede it.
You still have a choice.
You can say "no" some days
you can say "yes" some days
I have known you to say
"yes"
beautifully...
-- Ralph Cherubini
I wish I could say I will be hanging out with you on Tuesday afternoon. However, I will be sitting at home, teaching phonics. Both activities are rewarding. However, you are less likely to resist me and throw temper tantrums.
Must say, I’m glad you included the part about writing what is on your mind. Otherwise I would have put in my dibs on the ‘Writing Your Identity’ book. I’ve seen a few pages and I want to read more…