It is a truth universally acknowledged that authors are totally obsessed with stationery. I mean seriously, hopelessly, dangerously obsessed.
Notebooks and pens are the tools or our trade. Even with computers, tablets and phones, authors often need a piece of paper to scribble something down on. An overheard conversation on the bus. A curious conjunction of a piece of litter and a park railing. A cute dog watching the world go by from a seventh floor window. Writers are curious and observant and need to capture those observations before they vanish into the ether. So every author carries a notebook around with them.
My favourite handbag notebooks are like a passport and come from Muji. They are slim and easily slip into my bag. I use them to make notes if I go to a seminar, scribble plot points that come to me as the tram hurtles round the bend towards the next station or even to write the latest list of items I desperately need from Rymans.
I also try and keep a notebook for each project I'm working on. These are the well recognised hardback notebooks made by Moleskine or Leuchtturm. I use the A5 size as they are big enough to fit lots of words on the page but not to big to be intimidating. An empty page can be very frightening for an author. The larger the page, the more words are required to fill it, so in most cases I stick with A5 maximum.
My project notebooks often don't get filled to the end. I begin religiously making notes in the way that I think proper authors do - yep, seven books in, I still have to convince myself daily that I am as much a proper author as Stephen King or Michael Morpurgo. Notes on character, notes on setting, research notes. To be honest, I rarely go back to them. But like writing down revision notes, the act of putting pen to paper ensures that the information seeps into my brain in some form of other, ready to reappear in a different form at a later point. As my project progresses from being a bundle of ideas to an actual piece of work, I forget about my smart hardback book and move onto something cheaper.
I use a disposable notebook to write my first drafts. I always write long hand in the first instance and once I get going, my thoughts tumble out of the tip of my pain at great, illegible speed. I cross things out, leave sentences hanging unfinished and write the same thought six different ways at times. I find a spiral bound A5 notebook is best for this phase of writing. For some reason, I like the continental grid style so I tend to buy these notebooks from Lidl. The paper is good quality but the books inexpensive (99p) and I get through about twenty a year. As soon as I have typed up today's chapter, I rip the pages out so that I have a blank page ready to write on the next day.
Larger format notebooks feature in my life too. I use them when I want to make BIG plans. I use BIG writing and draw scruffy pictures that could be buildings or people or arrows or anything or maybe nothing. I think visually even though I have no skill as an artist. Expressing myself in big writing seems to unleash my creativity when an idea is still tiny and new.
My passion for stationery, led me to set up a website www.paperspenspoets.co.uk with Anita Loughrey where we explore the relationship between writers and their stationery. Everyone has their own quirks and preferences and the articles make fascinating reading.
Do you have a notebook obsession? Which brand? Format? Or is colour your thing?
My name is Jo Franklin and I am a stationery addict.
Showing posts with label stationery.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stationery.. Show all posts
Thursday, 25 January 2018
Tuesday, 13 January 2015
The Grand Clear Out
It’s late in the month to be
talking about NY Resolutions. There’s already been plenty of time for them to
be made, broken and forgotten til next year. I could apologise for bringing up
the distasteful topic on the 13th of the month, but I won’t because
one of my resolutions – many years ago – was never to apologise insincerely.
new year, new resolutions |
This year I’ve resolved to
lose weight – this time from my unwieldy monstrous work-in-progress as well as
from my unwieldy monstrous body; to practise an hour day on my (beautiful, new,
expensive – whoops, what happened to the resolve not to be extravagant?)
guitar; to keep my accounts monthly and – to keep my study tidy.
In pursuit of the latter I
spent several days having a Grand Clear Out. I had notebooks containing the
planning and in some cases the first drafts of every novel I have written – and
that means, I’m sorry to say, three more novels than have actually been
published. Many notebooks. Pretty notebooks, because they were bought from
Paperchase when I was working fulltime and therefore comparatively rich. And I
happen, like many writers, to be a stationery geek. I couldn’t possibly destroy them. They were a record of
years of hard work and hopes.
Well yes. But they were also
taking up space and gathering dust, and of no interest to anyone, not even me.
I do have a few MSs that I show at author visits, but I don’t want to hang on
to rough outlines of aborted projects. I don’t kid myself that some American
library is going to make me an offer for them. I no longer wish to see anyone else’s
rough first drafts, discovered and published after death – I used to, before I
was published, but now I always feel uncomfortable reading something that the
author didn’t intend to make public.
So the notebooks were shredded
and left out for recycling. The bin lorry has come and they are no more. I have
more space in my study, and am no longer surrounded by the ghosts of the-novels-that-never-were.
If I get run down by the recycling lorry and someone has to clear out my house
there will be fewer notebooks for them to tackle.
OK, I may have kept one or
two. But there’s always next year’s Grand Clear Out.
And on Monday I called into
Muji – their notebooks are gorgeous and just that bit cheaper as befits a
struggling fulltime writer with a resolution to be less extravagant. I may have
stocked up a little. After all, there's plenty of space now.
lovely new notebook drawer |
Labels:
clearing out,
New Year Resolutions,
stationery.
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