Princess, and some thoughts on writing

posted by Neil Gaiman

Princess, my old, old old cat, is coming to the end of her life. She's somewhere over 20, but we do not know how much over 20 she is, as she was living wild in the woods for at least a year before she decided to live in our house instead. Right now she's in the bathroom in the attic, beside the space heater, sleeping most of the time.

This is her on my lap last night. (From WhoSay.)



Because she is in the attic I went into the attic last night, and while I was there I looked in some tubs of papers. I found one marked Poems, and found myself flicking through sheafs of discolouring papers with poems or drawings or prose on them, including the first ever description of Mr Croup and Mr Vandemar by Neil Gaiman aged 17 (only I spelled it Kroop then), with a drawing of each of them.

And what amazed me was that there was almost nothing there that was written by me.  I'd sound like e.e.cummings one moment and an awkward mash-up of Moorcock and Zelazny the next. You can tell exactly when I've been reading the complete poems of Rudyard Kipling...  I could point to every poem, every unfinished fragment of prose in that folder, and tell you who I'd been reading, what I was thinking at the time. Everything read like a bad imitation of somebody else. There wasn't anything in there that indicated that I was going to be a writer, a real writer, with something to say, except for one thing, and it was this:

I was writing. There was lots of writing going on.

And that made up for so much. I never knew how to finish anything longer than a couple of pages, but I was writing.

When SHARED WORLDS asked me (and other writers) to write some writing advice on our hands (it's at http://www.wofford.edu/sharedworlds/handinhand.aspx - go and look), I wrote this:


You want to be a writer? 
Keep writing.


Labels:  Keep writing, all the papers in the attic and the basement will have to go somewhere sooner or later, Write, Talk to the hand, Croup and Vandemar

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Published on March 30, 2013 07:34
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message 1: by Samantha (new)

Samantha Boyer Ha! Love Princess! Thanks for the advice on writing!


message 2: by Barrie (new)

Barrie Collins You're right about keep writing, I'm doing it now, its horrible, and rewriting too. Love your cat, old and wise; my cat just died, 17 years old, really awful loss of her presence in the house.


message 3: by Alana (new)

Alana I also think the moral here is to adopt a cat!


message 4: by Barrie (new)

Barrie Collins Alana wrote: "I also think the moral here is to adopt a cat!"

And write good stories!
I love cats but now I prefer the native animal and bird life around where I live, in the mountains here in Australia.


message 5: by Michael (new)

Michael That is a cat that has stories to tell.


message 6: by Susie (new)

Susie With cats around you don't need outside inspiration sometimes... Unless you want to write about something other than cats! ;)


message 7: by Denise (new)

Denise Excellent advice! I remember you once said Princess had many stories to tell. She certainly looks like she can keep a secret. <3


message 8: by Patricia (new)

Patricia I love everything you write.... and everything you read aloud....keep on writing, reading and inspiring! Thank you Neil.


message 9: by Deborah (new)

Deborah I have those tubs too--now I just have to keep up the writing and get it out there. Thanks, Neil. It's good to hear from someone on the *other* side of the published-writing hurdle. And Princess is just beautiful in her 20+ years.


message 10: by Heather (new)

Heather Finley Sorry to hear about Princess. Such a beautiful cat.

Great advice! I'm a comic book writer and I basically say the same thing to people looking for advice. Turning an idea into something on paper is a skill any writer needs to master by practice.


message 11: by Natalie (new)

Natalie Sorry to hear about Princess.

It's a wonderful advice! Practice indeed makes perfect.


message 12: by Sydney (new)

Sydney Cobb "You want to be a writer?
Keep writing."

These words are so perfectly simple. And yet I find them perfectly inspiring. Thank you.


message 13: by Laura (new)

Laura Doyle my lap cat, Kit-Kat(original huh), died this year. she was my bookrest for which i read all Gaiman's books. Glad you kept writing sir!


message 14: by Jonathan (new)

Jonathan I don't know what I'll do when my cat Harvey gets old. I lost another, younger cat Maestro to the road last year and my mother's dog of many many years passed yesterday. You just have to enjoy the time you have with them.


message 15: by [deleted user] (new)

Looks good for her age. Hope she passes peacefully.


message 16: by Maryanne (new)

Maryanne Any animals loss is a great one we have lost our youngest cat to a hoon on the road and another one to cancer ...they all leave memories and the gap of a friend who is missing


message 17: by Barrie (last edited Apr 01, 2013 04:50PM) (new)

Barrie Collins Frank Herbert (Dune) said the same thing when asked what they did at one of his writing workshops; "We write".


message 18: by orange tangerine (new)

orange tangerine My cat is really good at sitting on my lap just when I'm trying to get up to go do something other than writing. I think it's her way of telling me to keep writing.


Mostly on Storygraph Sweet Princess. What a good writing assistant.


message 20: by Terence (last edited Apr 09, 2013 07:38AM) (new)

Terence Park 20 is old. I had a cat who lived till she was 17.
I don't keep cats anymore but Mrs Archie does. Why? I don't know; she doesn't like them and prefers dogs.
Agree - Keep Writing


message 21: by [deleted user] (new)

All truly great things are simple: cats and good advice included. Enjoy the time in both cases.


message 22: by Ingrid (new)

Ingrid Neil, please ask Princess to greet Sid for me once she reaches her happy kitty trails... I promise she'll like him... He had to leave me last year, and I was so grateful he waited til I came home from vacation before he did... He also enjoyed books, and would lay on everyone he good get onto...


message 23: by Deale (new)

Deale Hutton Appreciate the advice. Perhaps a tattoo is in order! I am a painter/sculptor, and find it difficult sometimes (like now) to keep making 'stuff'. Other life, unimportant sometimes, gets in the way. Very annoying How do you keep writing with the tour schedule? Must be difficult, to say the least. As with all the cat comments above, I have an elderly cat. <3 him to pieces.


message 24: by Lynne (new)

Lynne I am very sorry to hear about Princess. I think it is always the best pets who show up at the door and choose us. I have a spunky and now chubby cat for that very same reason.
Thank you so much for the great writing advice and for all of your wonderful blog posts.


message 25: by [deleted user] (new)

I tried emailing myself a chapter a day then copying and pasting the emails into a document. Wrote a couple of novels that way.


message 26: by Lynne (new)

Lynne I like that idea Adrian


message 27: by [deleted user] (new)

It sure got me writing! :) As Neil says, that's the main thing.


message 28: by Maira (new)

Maira M. Moura That's all I needed to hear(read) now.


message 29: by Sameer (new)

Sameer Tope Nice Blog.
This is interesting and good topic.
Thank you for sharing.
Blog writing services


message 30: by [deleted user] (last edited May 02, 2013 07:40PM) (new)

So, I was on Twitter the other night and happened to get into a bit of a chat with a former Dr.Who script editor who was also a technology/science journalist. And I happened to mention that I write chapters of my books on android tablet and email them to myself. So he replied I should use a Cloud that I can access from multiple devices and...speech to text! So I downloaded a speech to text app to my android and...this morning I added ten pages, 2.5 thousand words, to my latest novel,just by TALKING into the computer tablet! I just dictated it, the app converted what I said into text and then I shared it to myself and pasted it into the novel doc. Amazingly empowering! I mean, some editing is required but the first draft gets down in no time! At this rate, I might be banging out books by the dozen! :)


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