A few years
ago, The Daily Telegraph published a story about men and their sheds. Not
necessarily writers
and their sheds. Just men of any stripe with a desire for a sort of outdoorsy
man-cave, a place to escape, to hide from family, kids, life, or to watch
football on a Sunday afternoon.
I read that
story with irritation. Not annoyance with the men who wanted such a retreat,
but for those who would think my plan for a shed had a similar motivation.
My shed is not
what these men desire. It is a writer’s shed, a place the author Michael Pollan
has called, “the space of a daydream.” Pollan wrote a wonderful book — A
Place of My Own — about his own journey designing and building his writer’s
shed in Connecticut. Like his shed, I would like to think that my writer’s
shack would also be, as his was, “built with words.” I will not build it. I’m
leaving that up to the experts. But its essence, the metaphoric foundation will
be constructed with single words, one-by-one.
I am keenly
aware of this now, and only now that I finally have the building permit in my
hand. With this, I can’t help but consider move-in day—the carrying of books,
the arrangement of a desk, the position of my chair. Before this, however, I
will paint the ceiling frame white, like the ceiling in Dylan Thomas’ shed, and
cover the walls in barn wood or similar like the beautifully clean writing
space of E.B. White.
The permit will
soon be tacked to a tree in the yard and the men in boots will maneuver gravel
and lumber, they will measure twice and cut once, and they will shingle the
roof and pound nails with heavy hammers. And in the end I will have a place to
fill with words. It will not be Thomas’ boathouse, or Thoreau’s cabin, or
George Bernard Shaw’s tiny shack. It will not be designed to what they had. It
will surely hold the spirit of those wonderful spaces, but this shed will be
mine. Only one hundred feet from the back door of the house, I will have my own
uncomplicated “hut in the woods.”
More to come
on the development and construction as the days move on.
E.B. White's writing shed
Dylan Thomas' boathouse in Wales