In Bird by Bird, her
1994 writing guide, Anne Lamott approaches the craft with a near perfect blend
of seriousness and humor, never speaking down to her readers, while at the same
time reminding them that a healthy sense of humor about themselves is one of
the most useful tools in a writer's kit.
Lamott may not be able to turn you into the writer you want to be, but
she will motivate you to keep plugging away until something happens – even if
that “something” turns out to be a lifetime of writing for your own expressive pleasure.
Lamott characterizes herself as a shy, strange-looking child who
learned to use humor to deflect the taunts about her looks that boys made as
they rode by on their bicycles. As she
puts it, "So first I got funny and then I started to write...” And it paid
off, because in high school the desire of her classmates to see themselves
reflected in her stories gained her the kind of popularity she otherwise would
never have enjoyed. Anne Lamott's
defines her life and who she is by her writing, and she knows that there are
countless others out there who feel the same way. Bird by
Bird is her gift to those others.
Bird by Bird is divided
into five parts, each section geared to take the want-to-be writer another step
or two toward that goal. Part One, "Writing,"
focuses on structure and on techniques designed to keep you coming back to the
keyboard. She begins with the
"short assignment" concept by which a writer focuses on one tiny part
of the story he wants to tell rather than allowing the bigger picture to
overwhelm him. From there, Lamott covers
everything from plots, to the dangers of perfectionism (which she calls
"the oppressor, the enemy of the people"), to the merits of using
flawed and failing characters, to plot, and finally, to a section about
recognizing "when you're done."
Anne Lamott |
Parts Two and Three focus more on keeping yourself in "the
writing frame of mind" and knowing where to look for "help along the
way." Lamott describes the writer
as someone who stands alone but decides to take a few notes in the
meantime. She points out that a writer
is always writing, that no matter what is happening around him, his job is to
"see people as they really are," including himself. Lamott promises that simply giving yourself
"permission" to begin writing will start you thinking like a writer,
someone who sees material everywhere he turns.
The fourth part of the book addresses writer's voice, reasons to
continue writing (to expose the unexposed), publication (if you are one of the
very lucky ones), and the new fears that come with finally being published
(such as the terror that you now have to prove that you can do it all again).
Lamott calls the last part of Bird by
Bird "The Last Class," and here she repeats much of what she
tells her writing students in the classroom.
Not all of them will become published writers, she tells them, but they
should not let that stop them because being a writer will change their lives. Writing will "nourish the spirit," is
"Intellectually quickening," and has "the potential to be as
rich and enlivening as the priesthood."
Above all else, she says, "Writing and reading decrease our sense
of isolation. They deepen and widen and
expand our sense of life: they feed the soul."
If you want to be part of the "noble tradition" of
writing, published or not, Bird by Bird
may just be the book to get you there.
I love this book. I reread it every now and then just for a refresher and confidence boost.
ReplyDeleteI can see why, Stefanie. This and Stephen King's book on writing are my two favorites. They make it all seem real, down to earth, and very doable.
DeleteMy very favorite of her books.
ReplyDelete