A typical meeting of the writing group starts at two o’clock
on a Monday or Tuesday at the Queen’s house. There are four of us.
Eeyore – in charge of doom.
Dylan – anything goes.
Muttley (me) – in charge of disruption.
As we approach the door, we all stop to admire the garden.
Hollyhocks, black pansies, trailing clematis and shrub roses, all line the
route to the porch. It’s hard not to feel envy. The Queen has fingers greener
than the Hulk.
Once assembled, we share news. Of family. Of films seen. Of
food eaten. Of builders. Of fellow Bristolians. At some point the Queen guides
us onto matters of writing. We are reluctant, like a book group where no one
has read the book. Dutifully we report any happenings. This element is short.
We move on, taking it in turns to read aloud our latest work. There should be a
method in deciding who goes first, but no, we argue about it. Every time.
Eventually, one of us sighs, brings out a few sheets of A4
and the process begins. One voice. Three scribblers, pens at the ready. We mean
well, all four of us, truly we do. But it might not seem that way. The reader,
sharing her tortured words with us, is rewarded by giggles, sly glances,
outbursts . . . There is a rule that we don’t interrupt, but we break it
gaily. Whether it’s Eeyore’s
made-up words, my endless internal monologues, Dylan’s love for continuous
present or the Queen’s arty descriptions, we let rip. Small tears and then
often huge great gashes. The problem is that we don’t agree. Hardly surprising
if you consider our books. We have a plotter, a dreamer, a lover of tangents, a
repeater, a spiritualist, a pragmatist, a weaver, a schemer, a joker . . . We like
first person, third person, omniscient, accents, fantasy, reality, the past,
the future . . . We all think the pace is too fast, too slow, non-existent . .
. We’d all write the scene differently . . . although not necessarily any
better.
The feedback is only about a quarter useful – we ignore the
comments we don’t like. (They’re the same every time anyway – old dogs, new
tricks.) However, the relationships, support and conviviality are invaluable. Tea
and sweet things add to the pleasure.
When we’ve all had our moment in the spotlight, we try to
arrange the next meeting. This takes some time. The Queen likes to holiday. Dylan
has a roundabout to play on, Eeyore doesn’t know when she’s free, and I cannot
plan ahead. But we manage, noting the date, and then emailing the Queen a week
later to ask what we agreed.
I was invited to join the group after a random chat in an
aisle at the supermarket. I barely knew the Queen, and had never met the
others. The first few occasions were nerve wracking. Not only did I have to
produce a few hundred words I could bear to read, I had to try to make clever
comments. I failed at the latter, but they let me stay. Three and a half years
later, I still look forward to going. In a world with no structure, the
discipline of stumping up the next chapter – because turning up empty-handed is
just not the deal – has been a huge part of getting my latest book in shape.
It’s a lonely business, but less so, thanks to the
camaraderie in the kitchen of the house with the garden to die for. Long live
the writing group.
3 comments:
That sounds nice. I make do with a facebook equivalent.
Heh heh!
Tea with The Queen! A lovely insight into the solitary world of a writer!
Post a Comment