Every few years I reread Brenda Ueland's If You Want to Write. There's no precise calendar for when; no alarm bells go off when it's time. I just know. And right now, it's time.
As the name of this blog attests, I'm something of a connoisseur of books about writing. I have my favorites: Lamott, Goldberg, Cameron. But Brenda Ueland has always had a special hold on me. It's the first book on writing and creativity I ever read. I bought it during the summer of 1988 when I was working at Bearskin Lodge, at a now defunct Grand Marais book-and-art-supply store called The Book Station. I read it after work on the dock outside my cabin and before work in the lodge dining room overlooking the lake. My copy still contains the Book Station bookmark I got the day I bought it.
There are a number of reasons I love this book. Brenda Ueland was a Minnesotan and the book is replete with place names like Wayzata and Lake Minnetonka. Brenda Ueland was the daughter of Clara Ueland, the awesome woman suffrage activist. And the book was published in 1938 - love those 1930s! - which means that when Brenda Ueland frets about the bad state of contemporary writing, she complains about stuff like Eleanor Roosevelt's columns (which she derides as superficial).
The primary reason I love this book, though, is because it tells the truth. Because it has chapter titles like "Why Women Who Do Too Much Housework Should Neglect It For Their Writing." And because of images like this:
The bead-stringers among us might be interested in Daily Routines, a site Aune linked to recently, which explores "how writers, artists, and other interesting people organize their days." For the record, Brenda Ueland believed that all writers should walk five or six miles a day.
My first rhetoric teacher, who still holds a dear place in my memory, taught me this book. It is still on the bookshelf in my living room. small world.
Posted by: davetell | 18 December 2008 at 06:05 AM
Two things, quickly:
1. I have also recently discovered How to Write a Lot. Most useful for social scientists, perhaps, but still a good set of basic instructions. Especially right before you go on a research leave.
2. The walking thing makes so much sense.
Posted by: V | 18 December 2008 at 09:02 PM
Ah, one of my advisees told me about that book this past fall. I too like the nuts and bolts - definitely the "just do it" philosophy.
Posted by: caraf | 19 December 2008 at 10:41 AM