What am I going to write? I thought. My first blog in the
company of authors. I flicked through recent posts and there was Miriam
Halahmy, talking about how she has always written. Bingo!
I was a sporty kid, most often found either hitting a tennis
ball against the back of the house or walking on my hands. I liked to be
outside not inside, and I did everything fast. Running was my favourite occupation,
writing my least, because my hand couldn’t keep up with my head. As soon as I could, I dropped all subjects requiring sentences, for those that relied on digits and symbols.
Ten years flew by employed in big companies, followed by another ten working as a freelancer so that I could be around for my three children. Writing was for shopping lists, birthday cards and cheques.
writing my least, because my hand couldn’t keep up with my head. As soon as I could, I dropped all subjects requiring sentences, for those that relied on digits and symbols.
Ten years flew by employed in big companies, followed by another ten working as a freelancer so that I could be around for my three children. Writing was for shopping lists, birthday cards and cheques.
Then came Life-changing Wednesday.
I had rashly left my contracting
job, bored with endless meetings of twenty or more suits. The children were all at school and, not used to being home alone,
the days were long. On my way back
home from the supermarket (oh the domesticity of it), I stopped to look in the
bookshop window. There was a flyer for a creative writing course starting that
day at Clifton Library, 10.30. I dumped the bags and cycled over.
It was hideous. They all knew one
another having been meeting every Wednesday for years. Keen to hear each other’s
news after the long summer break, they took turns around the room talking of
their writing projects – books, poems, articles, plays. With every declaration
of prowess my armpits grew sweatier. Finally, all eyes were on me.
‘I haven’t written anything since
I was at school,’ I said, red-faced. ‘But I’ve got lots of ideas.’
Joan, OBE, elbowed me in the
ribs.
‘Better write them down, then,
dear.’
Ninety minutes later I hopped back
on my bike, homework assignment in my pannier. I wore down several pencils that
week, working on my first memory of being alone. Arriving at the next class the
teacher asked if I felt brave enough to read my piece aloud.
‘You try and stop me,’ I said.
Wednesday mornings became the
highlight of my week.
Months later our assignment was
to write the opening paragraph of a short story, setting the scene and casting
the narrative hook. The example I jotted down in my black notebook from 2005 was,
‘With hindsight, he realised he had never meant to destroy London.’ And underneath, ‘A short story is a really good day out, rather than a fortnight away.’
Armed with the rules, off I went.
I wrote the beginning, then the middle and then the end. After reading my first
few lines in class, the teacher exercised her honed sixth sense.
‘Is there any more?’
I read the 2,000 word story. She
said I should send it off somewhere.
Receiving first prize at the London Review Bookshop |
The winner of the Momaya Short
Story Competition is . . .
‘Muchlove later’, to steal from Roger McGough’s The Icingbus, I asked Joan what splendid deed led to her being awarded an OBE.
‘Getting to Over Bloody Eighty,’ she
said, slapping my thigh.
The thing is, if the flyer had advertised a pottery class starting Wednesday,
10.30, Clifton Library, I’d have gone there.
T. M. Alexander
15 comments:
What a wonderful story of serendipity and talent! And such a cheering start to the day - thank you
Can't believe you have come so far in such a short time! And I like the sound of Joan...
Welcome Tracy! What a fab debut post.
What a great start to your writing career! And it shows how amazingly important support and interest from other people, other writers, can be. And also that who you are at school isn't who you are forever! Lovely first post, look forward to more!
Welcome to ABBA - and I like the sound of Joan too - especially with that OBE tacked so casually on!
(Er, it wasn't me.)
Welcome, Tracy! A lovely post - and you've given me an idea for my next writing class, so thanks for that!
Lovely post, and thanks for giving us the opportunity to use that fantastic word - serendipity!
This is great, Tracy! A lesson in just dumping the shopping, getting on your bike and doing it!! Kellyx
Why is reading your words so much fun? Not sure your pottery would have given so much pleasure. Linds x
A great post!!! That is definitely you!! Wonder what would have happened if there had been a poster in the shop for pole dancing???
Tracy - you down to a tee! Especially the fetching photo. Well done, keep them coming Joanna x
Somehow Trace, I could hear your speedy, moving-towards-a-punchline voice as I read this! i just loved it, my fave bit being the part where you eschew all subjects needing sentences. Great !! Looking fwd to the next post (no pressure then).
And, Oscar, it's NOT cheating - how else do you think people start with this stuff?????
Hi TM
Interesting background to the author(you're not that bad at tennis either). Inspiring stuff to seize the day and not wait to do things when it can become too late. Just off to dust off my bike and look in some windows. Keep blogging.
you were born to entertain
Tracy, I can hear your voice as I read this. You are as enjoyable to read as you are to listen to! Jan-Jan xx
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