Unit 10
The Transaction
William Zinsr
1 About ten years ago a school in Connecticut held “a day devoted to the arts,” and I was asked if I would come and talk about writing as a vocation. When I arrived I found that a cond speaker had been invited — Dr. Brock (as I’ll call him), a surgeon who had recently begun to write and had sold some stories to national magazines. He was going to talk about writing as an avocation. That made us a panel, and we sat down to face a crowd of student newspaper editors, English teachers and parents, all eager to learn the crets of our glamorous work.
法医临床鉴定2 Dr. Brock was dresd in a bright red jacket, looking vaguely bohemian, as authors are suppod to look, and the first question went to him. What was it like to be a writer
3 He said it was tremendous fun. Coming home from an arduous day at the hospital, he w
ould go straight to his yellow pad and write his tensions away. The words just flowed. It was easy.
4 I then said that writing wasn’t easy and it wasn’t fun. It was hard and lonely, and the words ldom just flowed.
5 Next Dr. Brock was asked if it was important to rewrite. “Absolutely not,” he said. “Let it all hang out, and whatever form the ntences take will reflect the writer at his most natural.”
朱元璋的皇后6 I then said that rewriting is the esnce of writing. I pointed out that professional writers rewrite their ntences repeatedly and then rewrite what they have rewritten. I mentioned that E. B. White and James Thurber rewrote their pieces eight or nine times.科学消费
7 “What do you do on days when it isn’t going well” Dr. Brock was asked. He said he just stopped writing and put the work aside for a day when it would go better.
生物学科8 I then said that the professional writer must establish a daily schedule and stick to it. I
said that writing is a craft, not an art, and that the man who runs away from his craft becau he lacks inspiration is fooling himlf. He is also going broke.
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9 “What if you’re feeling depresd or unhappy” a student asked. “Won’t that affect your writing”
戒烟壁纸10 Probably it will, Dr. Brock replied. Go fishing. Take a walk.
11 Probably it won’t, I said. If your job is to write every day, you learn to do it like any other job.明朝灭亡的原因
12 A student asked if we found it uful to circulate in the literary world. Dr. Brock said that he was greatly enjoying his new life as a man of letters, and he told veral stories of being taken to lunch by his publisher and his agent at chic Manhattan restaurants where writers and editors gather. I said that professional writers are solitary drudges who ldom e other writers.
13 “Do you put symbolism in your writing” a student asked me.
14 “Not if I can help it,” I replied. I have an unbroken record of missing the deeper meaning in any story, play or movie, and as for dance and mime, I have never had even a remote notion of what is being conveyed.
15 “I love symbols!” Dr. Brock exclaimed, and he described with gusto the joys of weaving them through his work.
16 So the morning went, and it was a revelation to all of us. At the end Dr. Brock told me he was enormously interested in my answers — it had never occurred to him that writing could be hard. I told him I was just as interested in his answers — it had never occurred to me that writing could be easy. (Maybe I should take up surgery on the side.)
17 As for the students, anyone might think we left them bewildered. But in fact we probably gave them a broader glimp of the writing process than if only one of us had talked. For of cour there isn’t any “right” way to do such intenly personal work. There are all kinds of writers and all kinds of methods, and any method that helps people to say what they want to say is the right method for them.灰玛瑙
18 Some people write by day, others by night. Some people need silence, others turn on the radio. Some write by hand, some by typewriter or word processor, some by talking into a tape recorder. Some people write their first draft in one long burst and then revi; others can’t write the cond paragraph until they have fiddled endlessly with the first.
19 But all of them are vulnerable and all of them are ten. They are driven by a compulsion to put some part of themlves on paper, and yet they don’t just write what comes naturally. They sit down to commit an act of literature, and the lf who emerges on paper is a far stiffer person than the one who sat down. The problem is to find the real man or woman behind all the tension.
20 For ultimately the product that any writer has to ll is not the subject being written about, but who he or she is. I often find mylf reading with interest about a topic I never thought would interest me — some unusual scientific quest, for instance. What holds me is the enthusiasm of the writer for his field. How was he drawn into it What emotional baggage did he bring along How did it change his life It’s not necessary to want to spend a year alone at Walden Pond to become deeply involved with a writer who did.