A new adventure is underway. It's the debut of a new podcast entitled THE BLEEDING TYPEWRITER.
The title is a riff on the famous Hemingway line about writing not being so hard—you just "sit down at the typewriter and bleed."
However, THE BLEEDING TYPEWRITER podcast is not all about writing. It's about the creative process, about what it takes to pour your heart out—bleed, if you will—and be an artist, whatever that might mean to you. Part time, full time, freelancing, or maybe you've jumped right into the Bohemian lifestyle and are the real thing—a true starving artist. Maybe you're a musician, a painter, or photographer. Maybe you keep a journal and you see it as your creative output. Any of this requires a little blood, right?
That's what THE BLEEDING TYPEWRITER celebrates. Take a listen. See what you think. You can subscribe at iTunes or listen right here. And certainly, drop a comment here or email me. Love to hear from you!
Best,
David
On writing, art, music, and life. The blog of writer and journalist David W. Berner
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Friday, October 30, 2015
Monday, October 19, 2015
Are You Really Going to Read That?
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All of us have confided in a friend about something we did
or experienced that we know was—how do I put this—not so flattering, maybe
incriminating, illegal, dumb, something we are not proud of. But what happens
when you write about that “something” and then you read it out loud at a
literary event in public?
Been there. Personal essay writers are goofy people, you
know.
Tonight, I’m planning to read a story at a live literary
event that doesn’t shine the judgmental light on ME, but on someone else.
Someone I love.
Yikes.
The story is part of a manuscript, a creative nonfiction
book. At this reading, I’m segmenting a part of the bigger project to offer up
a 10-minute story of music, love, and weed. Marijuana. Ii think it’s a good
story. But what responsibility do we have as writers to tell these stories,
especially read them, out loud receptive people when the stories are not solely
about us—the writer—but about someone else?
We have tons of responsibility. We have to ask. We have to
let the person who is the focus of the story hear our side, read our work, and
allow them to respond. Do they want this out in the open? Are they okay with
this? I’m not saying you have to change what you write. After all, the story is
yours. It is your recollection and
memory. But they have every right to tell you they don’t like it or don’t want
it read to a large crowd at a bookstore. Then, you—and only you—have to decide
what’s next.
Luckily, in my case, the person in question is quite willing
to be the focus, to take the heat, to be the center of attention in a story
that, well, doesn’t necessarily flatter her.
All of this on my mind at the Hemingway House as I write in
my borrowed attic office. Hemingway penned mostly fiction, but much of it was
autobiographical in many ways. And yes, he made plenty of enemies using real
people as characters. And in his creative nonfiction work—Death in the Afternoon, A Moveable Feast, and others—he wrote about
real people and real events, and many of them loathed him for it.
Write the truth to the best of your knowledge. But tell your story as you see it, as you
remember it factually and emotionally. Be honest, be fair, and offer it up for
scrutiny. But always go out and tell it with everything you got—confidence,
meaning, and passion. It is the only way.
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