Did you wonder if I'd be here? I see quite a few of you have checked in already, I'm late - but I'm here!
So today I am going to write about the muse. Not the
band Muse (did you know there was a band? I didn’t until just now), nor the
nine muses of Greek/Roman mythology, although that is where the term comes
from. Nor do I mean the verb, to reflect upon or to think deeply. I mean the
noun, the word meaning a person who is the source of inspiration for a creative
artist. This is the dictionary definition, which also states that the muse is
generally considered to be a woman or a force personified as a woman. I expect
that is because the nine muses were the daughters of Mnemosyne and Zeus.
Mnemosyne was the goddess of memory, something vital for the early bards and
poets who memorized everything.
Literary history is full of tales of writers and their
muses: John Keats and Fanny Brawne, Dante and Beatrice, Baudelaire and Jeanne
Duval, F. Scott Fitzgerald and his wife Zelda, Yeats, who had his heart broken
by Maud Gonne, and Jane Austen’s unrequited love for Tom Lefroy. These muses
had a profound effect on the writers who loved them, which in turn influenced
their writing. I can’t say anyone has really done that for me, not just by
being there. However I have on occasion been inspired to write because of what
someone has done to me, so perhaps that is the same thing, even if as a one off
instance.
I consider the muse to be any source of inspiration. It may
be a snippet of conversation overhead at the grocery store that sets my
imagination off. Or it might be a news article that makes me wonder ‘what if?’.
Some writers use the muse as a handy
euphemism for writers block – ‘the muse has deserted me’ sounds more romantic
than ‘I have writers block’. Then when they find inspiration they say they were
‘visited by the muse’. That’s a nice way of putting it, and writers often being
superstitious, some probably fear saying ‘writers block’ in case they consign
themselves to that particular writers hell forever.
All writers have
different styles of writing; some outline, some write chapters out of sequence,
some edit exhaustively (well we all do that, but we all do it in different
ways), some even write the synopsis first and then fill in the book from that.
It’s not surprising then that we all have different approaches to inspiration.
Some writers can’t write unless they have music playing, in fact a lot are like
that. Others need a particular arrangement on their desk or their favourite cup
full of their preferred beverage before they can start.
So how do I get my inspiration, how do I write? As I said, I
get inspiration from anywhere, sometimes it’s a couple of things that I’m
turning over in my head that coalesce into the one, other times it’s a
particularly vivid dream that stays with me long enough to write it down. I
don’t use any of the useful gadgets some writers do. I may do if I could afford
them, but my style of writing doesn’t require them. I keep my story ideas on
the notes app on my phone. When they grow enough to warrant more information I
start a page in Word with the idea at the top, so I’m ready to begin writing
that story.
I don’t outline, except for the paranormal series. There I
found that I needed a story overview so that I could segment it into each book.
But it’s a very basic outline. For everything else I just sit down and write. I did try to outline when I first started writing professionally, but it doesn't work for me. I
don’t write chapters out of sequence and I’m in awe of writers who do. I have
no idea what future chapters will contain, so I write sequentially. What I do -
and I don’t know if other writers do this as well - is spend weeks, on occasion
months, turning an idea over in my head. I think about it, sometimes dream
about it. It’s always in the back of my mind, gradually coalescing. Then, when
I sit down to write, it flows as though already written in some dark recess of
my brain.
For the paranormal series, because I have a lot of
characters, I keep a notebook with their names and details. I’ve even included
a little drawing of each one to remind myself of their physical attributes.
I’ve written a totally different book since the first in the paranormal series,
so I need to be sure I remember the characters correctly. For the sequel to
Letters I’ve also got a list of characters, to keep them all straight. Now that
I’m writing the little series to fill in the gap between Letters and the book
about Saffron (as yet not named) those characters are living in my brain,
walking around and chatting together. It makes switching gears to Zora and her
crew interesting. However Zora as a character is different, although she and
Cassie have in common a belief that they are not good enough for their particular
story.
Is there anything that I need to set my scene so that I can
write? I would have said no, but when I thought about it a bit more I do
prepare to write. I mostly write in the afternoon (blame the Egyptian tendency
to start late in the day) and I get all of my chores done first. I currently
write on my bed, propped up against the headboard. Not having a desk, it’s the
most comfortable position for me here. I also get a good sea breeze through my
balcony door, and I can peek out the window and watch the boats on the Red Sea
to give my eyes a break from the screen. I bring with me a cup of tea and if I
have any, a couple of biscuits. I don’t have music, reason being that when I’m
writing I don’t hear anything so music would be redundant. Finally, I have cats
with me. I don’t prepare them, they happen to love it when I sit on the bed so
they usually beat me here.
So all I need to write is a cup of tea, a seat, my laptop
and some cats. And an idea. I’m a low maintenance writer!
The nine muses — Calliope, Clio, Euterpe, Erato, Melpomene, Polyhymnia,Terpsichore,Thalia and Urania — on a Roman sarcophagus (2nd century AD, from the Louvre)
This is the closest I could find to my definition of muse
I love hearing how you write, that you think about the characters and the story for awhile and then somehow you know they are "done" then you sit and write and it pours out already written. I love that process. It is certainly working for you and I find that your characters stay with me long after the book is finished.
ReplyDeleteThank you Cori, I have tried different methods but this is the one that works best for me!
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