HOME & AWAY
When I was eighteen years old the writing life was
something that I longed to embrace.
Now I’ve been operating as a writer for fifty years,
though the first fruits never made it
into print. Only the vegetables. . .
Some kind of writing “routine” began to emerge in the
early eighties. Before that—from 1965 till around 1980—I was something of a
random scribbler. I wrote a lot of stuff down, but I wrote it on
scraps and loose sheets of paper. My early literary
papers are a mess, mostly because they
are so disorganized and unruly.
In the early 1980s I started to employ notebooks, and
I have continued doing so until this day.
I like the instant organization that notebooks
provide. The rough and tumble notebook is kind of a shadow of the finished,
printed book. From page to page it moves chronologically. It is written by
hand—something I have always demanded of poems in their first drafts. And each
notebook serves as a time capsule, dated on the first page and the last.
The move to notebook was probably necessitated by
travel. When you are traveling you want
your writing all in one place. As I traveled, the
notebook emerged as the perfect technology.
For the most part, writers lead notoriously boring lives.
That’s why there was so much drinking and
fucking around going on in Paris in the 1920s. They
were attempting to shatter the boredom.
The way I keep life interesting for myself is by doing
a lot of traveling. So I have one routine as a
writer when I am home, and a different routine as a
writer when I am away.
HOME
This writer at home actually keeps no fixed schedule.
All that is required is that writing HAPPEN
sometime in the course of the day. Often, this
involves a line popping into my head sometime in
the hour or two after sleep has been abandoned. I
don’t like writing in the morning but often find
myself writing in the morning.
It tends to take me five to fifteen minutes to write a
poem. Rarely do I ever spend more time in
composing a poem. Almost never do I know what the last
line of a poem is going to be before
I undertake the writing of it. Usually I have a random
first line and that’s about it. I start writing
and see what happens. Usually, the poem has a mind of
its own. On rare occasions I need to poke
it with a stick.
If a poem has happened I might try to write another
one. This is usually a mistake. But sometimes
a second poem might come into being. It is usually
inferior to the first.
The poem is written by hand, in my notebook, using a
ballpoint pen.
These days I set myself a quota of twenty poems a
month. If it is getting towards the end of the month and I haven’t made quota I
will force myself to sit down and write. The “yield” from every
month is 3-4 good poems.
AWAY
When I am “away”, over the horizon, I conduct a fairly
structured writing life. I set aside the afternoon hours of 2 pm—5 pm in which
to write. I don’t write for three hours. Sometimes I
read, or listen to music. But something needs to be
written down during that time. The monthly
yield is probably 6-10 quality poems.
Being in another place I am more likely to write about
“landscape”. So I write more out-the-window poems when I am in a foreign
country. Some of the best poems I write in foreign countries are out-the-window
poems.
The poems are written by hand, in my notebook, using a
ballpoint pen.
My love of the exotic and my hatred of winter have led
me to live out of Canada in the winter
months, usually in some tropical location. That makes
complete and total sense to me.
There are a lot of palm trees in my Canadian poems.
That makes complete and total sense to
me as well.
2018-08-16
Toronto
Born in New York City in 1951, Ken Norris came to Canada in the 1970s. He became a Canadian
citizen in 1985. For thirty-three years, he taught Canadian Literature and
Creative Writing at the University of Maine. His most recent book is The Weight (Guernica Editions). He
currently resides in Toronto.
Nicely said, Ken. Especially: "On rare occasions I need to poke
ReplyDeleteit with a stick." I can really relate to that, though it can be a dangerous gesture, poems being a bit like rattlers. Especially good poems, or poems moving toward good. I admire your adoption of a structured writing life, and the use of notebooks. Bob Creeley wrote most of his poems in notebooks, and at the end of his life there were rows and rows of them, mostly finished efforts as I recall. I'm a lot more haphazard--hence the paucity of poems over decades. I seldom handwrite even first drafts, unless I'm not near a computer of some sort. Lately, I've been writing short poems on my Iphone with the result that the first words of every line are capitalized by default. I figure this must be why Wordsworth's poems are all capitalized. Or did he have an Android like the good shepherd of Ettrick?