Who do you write for?

Paris


"Over the years I have come to realize that I write the book I want to read, the one I can't find anywhere."  - Ann Patchett


"Any writer overwhelmingly honest about pleasing himself is almost sure to please others."   - Marianne Moore


"I would be a liar, a hypocrite, or a fool -- and I'm not any of those -- to say that I don't write for the reader. I do. But for the reader who hears, who really will work at it, going behind what I seem to say. So I write for myself and that reader who will pay the dues."  - Maya Angelou


"I write for those women who do not speak, for those who do not have a voice because they were so terrified, because we are taught to respect fear more than ourselves. We've been taught that silence would save us, but it won't."  - Audre Lord


"I write for the people I grew up with. I took extreme pains for my book to not be a native informant. Not: 'This is Dominican food. This is a Spanish word.' I trust my readers, even non-Spanish ones." - Junot Diaz


"When I write, I aim my mind not to New York but toward a vague spot a little east of Kansas. I think of the books on the library shelves, without their jackets, years old, and a countryish teen-aged boy finding them, and having them speak to him. The reviews, the stacks in Brentano's, are just hurdles to get over, to place the books on that shelf."  - John Updike


"When I write I try as far as possible to forget I'm writing it at all. I tell it down onto the page, as if I'm telling it to one person only, my best friend."  - Michael Morpurgo


Young Woman Writing by Pierre Bonnard


As for me, I write for my younger self...not so much the younger self I actually was, but the younger self I might have been had Fate shuffled her cards just a little differently: the one who didn't leave Pennsylvania, who didn't go to college, who didn't run fast enough and far enough to avoid replicating my mother's troubled, constricted life and who could barely have imagined the life I have now, its blessings and struggles alike. I write for her because I could have been her, oh so easily;  and she (and every young woman and young man like her) deserves much better.


Here's a passage from a Paris Review interview with Richard Ford that I've quoted before, but it's particularly germaine today:


"I want to write, partly at least, for the kind of reader I was when I was nineteen years old. I want to address that person because he or she is young enough that life is just beginning to seem a mystery which literature can address in surprising and pleasurable ways. When I was nineteen I began to read [William Faulkner's] Absalom, Absalom! slowly, slowly, page by patient page, since I was slightly dyslexic. I was working on the railroad, the Missouri-Pacific in Little Rock. I hadn’t been doing well in school, but I started reading. I don’t mean to say that reading altogether changed my life, but it certainly brought something into my life -- possibility -- that had not been there before."


That's it exactly.


Fabio Hurtado The photograph of me above was taken some years ago by Ellen Kushner, in Ellen & Delia Sherman's old flat in Paris...a long way from Pennsylvania. The art above is by Pierre Bonnard (France, 1867-1947)  and Fabio Hurtado.(Madrid, Spain).

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on March 06, 2014 22:00
No comments have been added yet.


Terri Windling's Blog

Terri Windling
Terri Windling isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.
Follow Terri Windling's blog with rss.