I wrote the first version of this post for
Thanksgiving three years ago. Since the book world and I have changed in that
time, I’m claiming a writer’s privilege and revising, keeping the parts that
still hold true, cutting sections that are outdated, and adding new thoughts.
Gerard Manley Hopkins wrote a lovely, eleven-line
poem called “Pied Beauty” that begins “Glory be to God for dappled things.” The
speaker goes on to offer praise for the freckled, speckled beauty in the
created world. I always read this Hopkins poem during the Thanksgiving season.
It reminds me to be more attentive to all that is praiseworthy in my world.
While I will certainly offer thanks on Thursday for big things—friends, family,
faith—and small ones—a single, perfect, golden leaf, the curve of a baby’s
plump cheek, the sound of rain at night—I will also give thanks for bookly
things, and my thanksgiving will include the fun of coining a word like
“bookly” when it suits my purpose.
Anne Lamott’s Bird by Bird
I read lots of books on the craft
of writing, and I have found useful tidbits in nearly everyone I’ve read. But
my favorite continues to be this book by Anne Lamott. It’s wise and funny, and
Lamott’s voice makes me feel that she’s someone I’d love to have lunch with.
I’m thankful she wrote this book, and I’m thankful that I have all these pithy
quotations from the book that I can copy and stick all over my desk. It’s as if
she knew exactly what I most needed to hear.
I worry about whether my plotting is an
irredeemable flaw, and Lamott says, “Plot grows out of character…. I say don’t
worry about plot. Worry about the characters. Let what they say or
do reveal who they are… The development of relationship creates plot.”
I battle perfectionism, and Lamott says,
“Perfectionism is a mean, frozen form of idealism, while messes are the
artist's true friend. What people somehow (inadvertently, I'm sure) forget to
mention when we were children was that we need to make messes in order to find
out who we are and why we are here - and, by extension, what we're supposed to
be writing.”
I wonder if writing is too important to me, and
Lamott says, “Writing can be a pretty desperate
endeavor, because it is about some of our deepest needs: our need to be
visible, to be heard, our need to make sense of our lives, to wake up and grow
and belong."
Books on my keeper shelves
I have several thousand keepers
that I have collected over the years—mysteries, poetry, women’s fiction, and
literary fiction as well as lots and lots of romances. The oldest ones belonged
to my mother, others date from my childhood, and a few were published this year. Most are books that I return to again and
again, sometimes to reread in their entirety and sometimes to reread favorite
passages. They make me laugh and weep and grow and remember. They hold within
their pages pieces of the person I was when I first encountered them—the
ten-year-old exhilarated and terrified by the idea of growing up, the
twenty-something consumed with grief and finding healing in worlds that offered
happy endings, the graduate student seeking escape from the “storm and stress”
of literary studies, the teacher weary of marking student essays, the writer
running short on inspiration and aspiration.
Friends who are writers
When I feel that everything I’ve
written is crap, when I want to shelter my progeny from the blasts of
rejection, when an agent’s words convince me that in the current climate
publication is an unattainable dream, I have friends who zap my self-pity,
cheer for my word count, challenge me to send my offspring into the world, and give
me the courage to get up again when I stumble. Each shares my dream of
producing a publishable novel and battles the same demons that plague me. They
inspire me and sustain me. I am immeasurably grateful for them individually and
collectively.
I’m also thankful for the joy of
seeing friends’ publication dreams come true. It’s an experience that always
brings particular delight, but this year that joy has had an extra measure as I’ve
seen two that I count among my dearest friends reach different points on this
journey, one with books published and readers raving and one with a golden
finalist position and a contract in hand.
Libraries
My book budget is inadequate for
the list of books I long to read, but thanks to my public library I get to read
everything on my list. If I discover an OOP back title of a paperback romance
that is unavailable in electronic format and is I can find only for $103 on
AbeBooks.com, I can usually locate a copy via my library. I have access not only to books on the
shelves of my local library but to 9.6 million
books on library shelves across the state. Add to this bounty the more than 3
million volumes plus countless electronic copies available through my university
library, which allows me to check out books for three months plus renewals, and
the wonders of ILL and the resources are vast indeed. My gratitude is
boundless.
Online romance community
The online romance community is
huge and diverse. A quick google of the term offers 106,000 sites. I’m grateful
for that larger community because it’s evidence of how large the romance
umbrella is and how active romance readers are. But my greater gratitude is for
my online community—the people I meet here at Just Janga and on the boards, blogs,
and email loops I frequent who love the books I love (usually), read my raves
and rants, make me laugh with their witty quips and bawdy humor, impress me
with their intelligence and insight, and just generally make my world bigger,
brighter, and better.
Writers who keep writing
I’ve lost count of how many Nora
Roberts books line my keeper shelves. I only know that I loved The Witness in 2012 as much as I loved
the first one I read, All the
Possibilities, in 1985. My Mary
Balogh collection begins with A Masked
Deception (1985) and ends with The
Proposal (2012). On shelves filled with books by Elizabeth Bevarly, Jo
Beverley, Connie Brockway, Robyn Carr, Loretta Chase, Christina Dodd, Anne
Gracie, Eloisa James, Lisa Kleypas, Teresa Medeiros, Mary Jo Putney, Julia Quinn,
Barbara Samuel, Kathleen Gilles Seidel, and many others, tattered copies and
shiny new covers coexist, mute testimony to my history with these authors. I
love discovering new authors, and I am grateful for their books; but my
thanksgiving song is more fervent for those writers who after five years or ten
or twenty-five are still giving me reasons to be glad I am a reader.
You
Where would writers of books or
blogs be without readers to respond to the words we weave, to share their own
ideas, and to be our best critics and most enthusiastic supporters? I am
grateful for each of you who takes the time to read my posts, to answer my
questions, to tell others about this blog. When I count my blessings Thursday,
you will be among them. Thank you.
Do you celebrate Thanksgiving the fourth Thursday in
November or any other date? For what bookly blessings are you most grateful?
I will be celebrating Thanksgiving on Thursday with the DH's family and on Saturday with my side. One of the biggest things I'm thankful for - an overabundance of family!
ReplyDeleteBookly blessings...hmmm. First and foremost I would have to say just the fact that I found enjoyment in reading again. I had gone so long without reading and then it was like stumbling upon treasure after treasure after treasure.
Then I would have to say the internet because that just blew the top off of the access I had to everything - authors, new and old; any genre of book I could imagine; and most importantly all of the awesome, awesome friends I've met over the years that share my love of romance reading.
I am especially grateful for you, Janga, who have steered me toward so many HEAs I've lost count!
Have a truly happy and blessed Thanksgiving!
Janga, Happy Thanksgiving! Our family celebrates today, and I'm watching the Macy's parade as I type this. The Pikachu and Spongebob floats and the Power Rangers Megaforce unit took me back to the boy's childhood, which included all those characters at one time or another. He's home until Sunday, which is the best part of the holiday for the dh and me.
ReplyDeleteI loved your survey of your keeper shelves. I, too, have thousands of keepers.
You have better luck at the library than I do. Our public library doesn't keep genre paperbacks very long, alas. Thanks to cutbacks, they don't buy nearly as much fiction as they once did.
I wish you the best in your quest for publication. I firmly believe persistence is key.
Happy Thanksgiving!
Thanksgiving is a uniquely American holiday I think. It sounds like a great idea to count your blessings at least once a year.
ReplyDeleteWhen I count my blessings Thursday, you will be among them. Thank you.
I never thought of myself as a blessing before. Hey, I quite like it!
For me, justjanga is the book blog par excellence. It provides a satnav to guide me through the complex terrain of romance literature, always following the high-road to enlightenment, illuminated with a purity of spirit and love and skilfully avoiding the morass of meaningless sensual indulgence.
In the domain of fiction, you are definitely one of our blessings Janga.
Long may it continue! *smile*
Thanks, Irish. The online community has considerably enlarged my reading lists too and given me a tribe of intelligent, funny reading friends who love romance as much as I do. I'm so glad you are part of that group.
ReplyDeleteNancy, I think family is the best part of any holiday.
ReplyDeleteThe funds for our local library have been radically cut as well, but it helps that I can put books on hold at libraries throughout the state. Part of the fun of picking up a stack of books is checking to see how many Georgia counties are represented in the group. Surprisingly sometimes tiny libraries have books that other, much larger ones don't. In these reduced budget times, I suspect much depends on what readers in the community donate.
Thanks, Q. Your comments always leave me with a smile. It was indeed a blessed day when you joined the Bon Bons at the EJ/JQ board.
ReplyDelete