Why I Write

1.

I think I was 10 when I started writing poems. My father gave me his old manual typewriter and I banged them out, two, three a day, hanging them on my walls, surrounding myself with them, until my walls were covered floor to ceiling.

My home life was always tense. My mother was dying on the living room couch. She was so sick she couldn’t move. The worst times were the quiet ones, the calm before the storm of my father’s rage. I was my father’s opposite; my explosions were internal. I wrote about my angry father and dying mother, hiding my feelings in clumsy metaphors. My room was a veiled indictment of my father and one day he ripped the poems down, but I kept writing. I just put them in a drawer.

When I was 12 I hung out at my friend Dave’s house almost every day. The guys sat in the bedroom listening to obscure heavy metal albums, while I stayed in the living room smoking pot with his mom and reading her my sad poetry. She was a product of a different era with dyed red hair and dark, tight jeans. I soaked up her attention like lotion. I must have left my poems with her, because at some point she copied them. Twenty years later she sent them to me.

When I was 13, just after my mother died, I ran away from home. After a year of sleeping on the streets I was made a ward of the court. I spent three months in a mental hospital and three and a half years in state-run homes. I wrote all the time, filling notebooks with ramblings. I was never shy about it. I gave my poems to anyone who would read them. A gang leader rapped my poetry in the youth shelter talent show.

I was writing to communicate. I had all this emotion I couldn’t sort through, I was sexually confused, I was from an abusive home and stuck in an environment that put a high premium on violence, or at least the threat of violence. I had to pretend to be able to defend myself. I was also suffering periodic bouts of depression. In eighth grade I tried to kill myself six times.

When I was 16 I started hanging out in cafés and attending open mikes. I loved standing at the microphone, talking to the audience, even if most of them were just waiting their turn.

I went to the University of Illinois on financial aid and a scholarship awarded by the last group home I lived in. I studied history but continued to write poems and read at the poetry night held at a vegetarian café near the quad. I imitated Charles Bukowski, Allen Ginsberg, and John Fante, my literary idols. And I met Hart Fisher, founder of Boneyard Press. Boneyard published comic books like Jeffrey Dahmer vs. Jesus Christ. When Hart heard me read, he said, “I’m going to publish your fucking book.”

In my junior year I dropped out of college to go to Amsterdam, where I found work as a barker for a live sex show. I wrote my first short story about that experience and, back at school, entered it in the undergraduate fiction contest. The story won first place out of 80 entries. One of the professors told me it was a good story, “but I can tell you’ve never been to Amsterdam.” I laughed at him. But now I can see what he means. The Amsterdam in the story wasn’t real—it lacked the specificity of detail that brings a location to life. But it was different from the other stories in the contest.

To finish college, I took a six-year hiatus from drugs. But when I graduated I started working as a stripper and shooting heroin. There were other things happening, but that’s a pretty good summary. The people I did heroin with were older than me and ridiculously attractive. We looked like Calvin Klein models, all passed out around the couch with our shirts off. In between I wrote about copping drugs and getting high, journals I would read out loud next time we were shooting up. My friends liked being written about. But then I overdosed and spent eight days in a hospital barely able to move, lost 30 pounds, and that was the end of that.

A major shift occurred in my writing. My girlfriend went traveling and I sent her letters poste restante as she wandered Europe. They weren’t so much letters as diaries, some 40 pages long, written by hand. It was an audience of one but she was the only person I wanted to impress. The letters were free in a way my other writings weren’t. They came easily. If I was paying attention I would have seen an important lesson about changing style and voice and letting my imagination run wild.

The next summer I published my first story in the Sun magazine. It was about visiting my father when he was on one of his screaming jags. I stood awkwardly in the kitchen with my stepmother, lusting after her and wondering why she didn’t leave. Like everything else I wrote it was basically true. My fiction was just reality-PLUS, a slightly more intense version of the world I lived in. In fiction I could feel things, but in life I was too inconsistent; my feelings changed too fast for me to pin them down. And I could hide behind the fiction, make observations about people that I claimed not to believe. It was the first story I’d sent for publication and the first magazine I sent it to. I thought, this is easy. But I wasn’t published again for three years. I sent story after story, rejection letters clogging my mailbox. Some of them encouraging, some pointlessly cruel.

The urge to publish is a hunger. The drive to write and the drive to publish are virtually the same thing, at least for me. They both come from somewhere deep. Like the drive for sex, they can be explained but the explanation is always incomplete.

Hart Fisher made good on his word. I contributed a thousand dollars and Boneyard Press printed 2,000 copies of Jones Inn, based on the journals I kept from my heroin year. Jones Inn was 93 pages. We called it a novel, but it wasn’t really, and Boneyard Press wasn’t really a book publisher. There was no marketing department, no distribution deals, and they spelled my name wrong. The book was available in some comic stores. A capsule review ran in the San Francisco Bay Guardian, a profile ran in the Chicago Reader, and then silence.

My next book, A Life Without Consequences, was set in the group homes of my adolescence. The year after that I wrote What It Means to Love You, a novel based on my time as a dancer in gay clubs in Chicago. I didn’t know what to do with the two books. I didn’t want to publish them with Hart; I still had hundreds of copies of Jones Inn. The only other writers I knew were the poets I met at open mics. We learned from each other, but we weren’t connected. We didn’t have agents or contacts in New York. We didn’t know the difference between a small press and a large press or what kind of advance we might ask for.

I sent both books to MacAdam/Cage, a new publisher that was accepting unsolicited, unagented manuscripts. At the same time I applied for the Wallace Stegner Fellowship at Stanford University. The program received close to 900 submissions for five spots. MacAdam/Cage bought both novels for $18,000 each. After selling my books I went traveling and forgot about the fellowship. When I checked in with my subletter she told me that Tobias Wolff, the fellowship’s director, was trying to get in touch with me. He had called over a week ago.

Suddenly I was a writer. I had never thought of myself that way before. Writing was just a hobby, this thing I did in my spare time. But now it was how I made my living. Stanford gave us $30,000 a year and we didn’t have to do anything except come in once a week and read each other’s stories. We had all the time and resources to write, and no excuses if it didn’t work out. I was amazed by the other writers. Their writing was rich, textured, and served with an economy mine lacked.

At Stanford I realized there was an entirely different kind of writer. Many of the fellows had thought of writing as a career for years. The Stegner program doesn’t require recommendations and isn’t concerned with whether you have ever studied creative writing. Applicants are accepted on the strength of a 9,000-word writing sample. Some previous fellows hadn’t even finished college. Nonetheless, my two years at Stanford were dominated by people with graduate degrees in creative writing. They studied English as undergraduates, spent two to three years in an MFA program, then won fellowships and awards and went to writers’ colonies. Most came to writing as lovers of literature. They wanted to tell stories. They were readers, shaped by the books they’d read. They saw writing as a craft, which it is. But it was a completely different starting point from mine and that of the poets I knew. We came to writing at an earlier age, from an urge to release a scream that had stuck in our throats. Then we worked on our screams until we thought they were something someone might want to hear.

The fellowship is the best thing that ever happened to me. Because I hadn’t studied writing before, I had more to gain. Tobias Wolff talked about the importance of staying in one place, of allowing characters to get uncomfortable. He told me to read Raymond Carver’s “The Student’s Wife” to see how tension could be subtle. Tom Kealey and John L’Heureux showed me how to write dialogue. “Dialogue is something characters do to one another,” L’Heureux said.

Other fellows and professors taught me how to read, how to learn from a manuscript, to recognize how an author compressed time or moved between characters and scenes. I gained a lot in those workshops, even from the things I didn’t agree with. In the workshops there was too much emphasis on explaining. When people didn’t know what to say but felt they should comment on a story, they would ask why a character did something, a sometimes important but often meaningless question. Motivations are mysterious, and backstory brings narratives to a halt. Overexplaining a story is like adding too much rosemary to a soup.

Focusing only on my writing for the first time, I wrote my best novel, Happy Baby.

 

2.

My writer’s block started in the middle of 2004, came to full bloom in 2005, and lasted until April 2007.

Happy Baby was out and I was writing about the presidential election. As in all of my novels, the protagonist in Happy Baby is a stand-in for me. He was raised in group homes and heavily into S&M. That May I got a note from a journalist who had interviewed me. He’d been contacted by my father, who told him I was a liar, a spoiled kid from a middle-class home looking for attention. I quickly realized that he wasn’t the first journalist my father had written to. My father had left a trail of denials across the Internet like digital breadcrumbs.

There was truth to what my father was saying; I had mythologized myself at his expense. But there were also things that were simply false. He told the journalist that I could have come home at any time. In fact, when I was arrested at age 14 sleeping in an entryway, I didn’t know where my father lived. He had moved with his new wife. He wrote that I had gone to two high schools, not four. That I left home at 15, not 13. He didn’t shave my head, he gave me a haircut. He only handcuffed me to a pipe one time, and look how many stories I wrote about it.

It’s hard to accurately convey the psychological effect of having your story denied by a parent. My father was retired, crippled, and discovering the Internet; he didn’t have anything better to do. Anytime I came across something written about me, he would already have been there and left a comment. When talking or writing about myself I started qualifying everything. I had to say there were people that remember things differently, or this is just how I remember things. I didn’t respond to my father but he made me question the stories I told. Were my memories real or made-up? He continued to chip away, thinking perhaps that we would compromise on a version of events in the middle. He left one-star reviews of all my books on Amazon, stating in the reviews that I had never been in a group home. I pretended it didn’t affect me, but in fact he was hammering at the foundation of my identity. I started to disappear.

About this time I fell in love for the second time in my life. I was consumed by Lissette, driven to her in part by my unspooling relationship with my father. Lissette was as beautiful as any woman I had ever seen and she looked at me the way a mother looks at a child and I went to her the way a junkie goes to a needle. One time we stayed in bed together for four days. Our relationship was full of passion and defined by intensity. It ended exactly as these things do, slowly and painfully, over time.

The most important aspect of my writer’s block was expectation. When I wrote my first three novels I didn’t know any writers who thought of writing as a career, only some poets intent on honing their screams to maximum effect. My small publications had impressed everyone. But now I was friends with lots of writers. They subscribed to Publishers Weekly and knew the difference between certain editors at Norton and HarperCollins. I knew people getting six-figure advances for short-story collections, authors of bestselling novels.

I don’t think I was jealous, because I generally believed they deserved their success. Still, I began thinking more about what kind of writing might sell, and I internalized some of the prejudices of the literary community. One of those prejudices, although certainly not held by everyone, is that writing from experience has less value and is less creative than a story fully fictionalized by its creator. It was OK to write one novel based on your life, but then you were supposed to move on. There was something dirty, indulgent, and immature about continually mining your own experiences. I was frequently asked if I was going to write something that wasn’t about me “this time.” I always said yes.

And so, for over a year, I tried to write a book or a story that had nothing to do with my life. I wasn’t trying to be Michael Chabon; I would have been happy to write an average pulp crime novel. But I didn’t have the knack. The stories were lifeless, the writing lacked energy. I thought, who would read this? It didn’t stop me from coming out with another book, My Girlfriend Comes to the City and Beats Me Up, but it was just a collection of previously published erotic vignettes. A minor work by any standards, but the best I could do at the time. Writing had gone from keeping me sane to driving me mad. I was bottled up. I had lost my scream. By early 2007 I was very suicidal.

One of the great things about being low is that you stop caring. I started writing with abandon, without worrying where I was going. It was just like those letters I had sent to Europe 12 years earlier. I typed whatever came into my head. The next day I did the same, and the next day. It felt good. Especially rewriting, going back through, combing the sentences into something smooth, trashing what was uninteresting. This time it wasn’t fiction. It was something new, and it was better than anything I had ever written. I reread the manuscript all the time and felt like I was reading my own diary, reclaiming my memories. I saw patterns I didn’t know I had. Threads wove together, and slowly a narrative emerged. It was my memoir, but it was also about other things, including three murder confessions—all of them false—by people I was vaguely connected to. It was about what can and can’t be known, and the tendency of truth and lies to mix together permanently, like paint, and become what we think of as history. I had been writing the book for eight months before I even knew what it was about.

 

3.

I have a quote from Philip Roth’s American Pastoral that I carry with me everywhere. “What was astonishing to him was how people seemed to run out of their own being, run out of whatever the stuff was that made them who they were, and, drained of themselves, turn into the sort of people they would once have felt sorry for.”

It’s natural to want more, to grow, to change, to grow up. But it’s easy to forget why we do what we do. Why did we become writers to begin with? The most disheartening thing I saw at Stanford were brilliantly talented writers forgetting what they loved about writing. Many became more focused on teaching. They became professors and adjunct faculty. They still wrote, but seemed to think more about their teaching jobs than their next book. Their students’ writing became more important than their own.

I have to qualify this. There were some people in the program who were born to teach. They loved reading and commenting on student work. They realized how much they loved teaching while in graduate school. It gave them energy and made them feel alive. But at least as many didn’t like teaching. They thought it was what they were supposed to do as writers. They spent all their creativity leading workshops, which at times is little more than an underpaid editing position. It’s been said that you could fit all the readers of literary fiction in a football stadium. The huge number of creative writers compared to those readers creates a marketplace where it is almost impossible to make a living. So our universities are filled with great American writers, but many of them aren’t writing anymore. Or not much.

Over the years people have asked me how I feel about MFA programs. They wanted a critical opinion, knowing that I didn’t choose to get the degree myself. But I always said it seemed like a good idea, as long as you were funded and didn’t have to spend any of your own money. I didn’t see it as much different from how I spent my 20s, wandering around, working odd jobs, and writing every day. But I’ve started to change my mind. I don’t think MFAs are bad for students—the programs keep them focused on writing at a time when they might have give it up for other things. Many of the best writers got an MFA, like Flannery O’Connor, ZZ Packer, and Michael Chabon, to pick a few. But MFAs might be bad for teachers. With only a few exceptions, the programs serve as cash cows for the colleges. For the school to make the most money, faculty are underpaid and overworked. Some writers get so caught up in the idea that they’re supposed to teach that they end up in adjunct positions or teaching online courses that barely pay minimum wage. I’ve heard many lamenting their abandoned manuscripts, blaming their students and the universities for exploiting their labor.

Only a fool would go into writing for money. I don’t know anybody who started writing for that reason, but I’ve seen a lot of people end up there. There are a few authors that make big money, and they are so rare, so exceptional, they might as well not exist. They are economic freaks of nature. Among literary authors they are a subclass of an endangered species. Even when an author gets a big advance for a novel, say $100,000, it’s probably for a book that took three years to write. It will probably take him that long to write another one, presuming he doesn’t spend a year writing something he doesn’t like and throwing it away. The second novel has to be better than the first and, stripped of the “first-time author” label, he’s unlikely to get as much money the next time around.

Writing doesn’t make sense unless it’s about something else. When I’m at my best I don’t know where I’m going. Writing is an exploration and I’m a detective, a treasure hunter searching for clues. I still write to communicate, which as I get older is less about screaming and more about connecting (though it’s about screaming, too). More than anything, writing is what I want to do with my time.

There are other great reasons to write. To tell a story, to be heard, to create art, to participate, to add to the generational discussion, to make a political point, to make the world a richer place. As in most pursuits, remembering why you came to it is as important as being ready to change.

But how do writers get by? That’s more complicated than it sounds. What do we mean by “getting by”? Do we need as much as we think we do? How important is it to make more each year than the year before? While working on a first book, almost everyone has a job that has nothing to do with writing. When people tell me they would write if they had more time I’m always skeptical. The hardest-working fellows at Stanford rarely wrote more than four hours a day.

For some people, teaching creative writing workshops is a reasonable answer. But you have to ask yourself if you are that person. The writers who are truly energized by the teaching experience are a minority—and that group becomes smaller when you take away the people who teach occasionally, like me, and are left with the ones for whom teaching is a career. There’s nothing wrong with teaching creative writing, if it’s something you really want to do and enjoy. But is it? Most creative writing teachers could make just as much bartending, and bartending would be less deleterious to their creative lives. And there are other jobs, humanitarian jobs like working in a homeless shelter, construction jobs, all sorts of things. Even career jobs. Lots of great books are written by doctors and lawyers. Writing is a fantastic hobby.

I realized that to continue as a writer I had to adjust certain expectations. My books have never sold in huge numbers and probably never will. But I can make enough while only writing what I want to write. Several times a year I teach a two-hour seminar about writing from experience. I love teaching the seminar because I get to engage with an interested group about topics that are really interesting to me, without having to read their work. I think we both get more out of it that way. But if I did it too often it would be just like any other job. Sometimes I can get $500 or $1,000 for giving a reading at a university and sometimes a royalty check will come from nowhere, like found money. I’m 37 years old and I can live off $30,000 a year, which is about what I make. It’s not a lot for San Francisco, but it’s enough. I try to do the best work I’m capable of, which is not the same as making the most money.

I’m at an age where my nonwriter friends are buying property, having babies, and moving ahead in their careers, while I live in a rent-controlled apartment with my young hipster roommate. I still go through heavy bouts of depression; it’s my nature. But I wouldn’t choose a different life. Time spent focusing on art is a privilege and a gift. The writing doesn’t make me happy, but it makes me happier, and it makes everything else easier to take.

I’m not turning away money; I don’t pitch articles to magazines and I don’t sell books I haven’t written yet. Pitching is the other side of the teacher trap, where a great writer sells an idea for big money and is then stuck struggling through books or ideas she’s lost interest in. When you pitch, editors expect you to map out the article. They don’t want explorers, they want people who know the terrain.

There are writers who do great work in this system. Most of them are journalists, which is usually different from being a novelist or even a creative nonfiction writer. The system in place for professional writers doesn’t work for me and it doesn’t work for most people who consider themselves creative writers; but there are plenty of exceptions, the Joan Didions of the world who raise journalism to the highest art.

It sounds spoiled, but I don’t think there’s anything wrong with considering yourself an artist. There are sacrifices as well as payoffs. When I was discussing my new book with two married writers, they kept asking how I could work without an advance. I didn’t see how they could work with one. They said they needed a certain amount of money and that they had children. They made their children sound like a tremendous burden, and I felt they were using the word need when they should have said want. There’s nothing wrong with prioritizing something higher than writing. The husband has sold a lot more books than I do and has plenty more money than I have, but being a writer seems to make him unhappy. One day, when he was telling me how easy I have it and about the kind of advance he needed, I snapped. I said his book wasn’t worth more than my book just because he has kids. We’re lucky to be writers. Nobody owes us anything.

 

4.

It’s amazing and heartening how many people want to be writers. Like all writers, I’m frequently asked about process. Process is different for everybody. When I’m really in a book I work seven days a week, three to six hours a day, starting when I first get up. I write every day because I’m not capable of writing eight hours straight. If I were I would skip the weekends. A girlfriend once told me she had good news. She didn’t have to work on Wednesday; we could spend the whole day together. She didn’t think of me as someone with a job. It made me happy. I kissed her a bunch of times and told her I couldn’t see her on Wednesday.

The vast majority of my time is spent revising, the manuscript decreasing then expanding ever so slightly as I cut and insert, like breathing. Maybe once a week I’ll have a burst of inspiration and write 4,000 words in an hour or two. Those hours of inspiration are the highlight of every week. I spend the rest of my time rereading and rewriting. Chuck Close said, “Amateurs look for inspiration; the rest of us just get up and go to work.” I am very much still an amateur.

I’m also often asked about publishing. I tell people that it’s easy to get published; it’s just hard to get paid. There’s lots of good writing, but there’s very little that actually stands out as different and necessary or so good that it demands to be read. If you write something like that, someone will publish it. I don’t think I could keep going if I didn’t believe that.

I don’t believe in connections. I believe in the slush pile. I remember sending an unsolicited personal essay to Salon.com. When it was published I got a letter from an editor at GQ asking if I had anything else. A similar situation resulted in my writing a long article for Esquire. Unsolicited manuscripts worked for me: Five of my seven books were sold without an agent, though “sold” might not be the right term. Of the four anthologies I edited only one of them was agented. It’s better to have an agent, if you can find a good one. You should always try to get the most for whatever you do. It was a mistake for me to wait so long. But my point is that to be published you don’t need to know anybody. For short stories and personal essays and poems in particular, just write and send them. Sometimes writers spend all their energy pitching articles and don’t write anything, as if they’re waiting for permission. By the time the editor responds the writer might not even want to write the article anymore. There are many publications that are only great because they take the slush pile seriously. And agents read those journals, often finding their clients.

But all of that is secondary. An editor once told me why writers don’t get published: The number one reason they won’t publish a book is because they haven’t written it yet.

When I got to know other writers I was surprised, but also comforted, to find that they were often as messed up as I was—especially fiction writers. They were just as insecure and obsessive. They went through periods of gigantic confidence when they felt like they could do anything, then slipped into cavernous depressions when they wondered if they had anything of value to say. It didn’t matter how successful they were. They wasted time, berated themselves mercilessly. Most of us have something wrong at our core. If we didn’t, we would write for television, where the standards are lower and the money is better and they throw bigger parties. But we want to create something good, and we want our names on it. Our creativity is our Nile flowing through us, all of our nourishment blossoming along its banks.

The hell with it, let’s take this metaphor one step further. It’s easy to forget the river, take it for granted. Like parents who love you no matter what, you don’t miss them till they’re gone. You might want to think before wandering away from the source of your inspiration. You might think you need things you don’t; you might think there’s something greater over the next berm, only to cross into a long desert.

But here’s the good news: The river is always there. You can always return, but getting back might require covering the same distance and take as long as the time you’ve spent away.

***

This piece was originally published in Canteen.

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44 responses

  1. Tom Honig Avatar
    Tom Honig

    Very moving. A blast of honesty, Steve, that really connected with me.

  2. “I don’t believe in connections. I believe in the slush pile.”

    What a wonderful sentiment, but I wish it were easier for me to believe that others felt the same way. I’ve heard from people that know people that many journals won’t seriously look at you unless you are already ‘famous’ or otherwise connected. That statement has troubled me since I heard it. But perhaps that is a conception warped by the vacuum of non-acceptance, something most writers struggle with. I don’t know. I’ve only been heaving my shoulder at this toil for a year or so. Hardly any time at all. Certainly not enough to let hair sprout from my ears and bumble about all crotchety and illspoken. I said thanks on Facebook, but I’ll say it here again: thanks for posting this. It’s extremely heartening for newish writers. You’ve changed my day with your words. How about that?

  3. Jay Cee Avatar

    Thank you. Hit me right where I needed at a rough (writing) time.

  4. Thank you for this great essay. Just what I needed to hear at this time.

  5. e. night Avatar
    e. night

    Thank you. This is the most encouraging piece I’ve read in a year.

  6. Thank you for this essay. It answered a lot of questions I’ve had for you and for myself. As always, the writing was unapologetic but humble. Very smart and informative. Also, there’s a bit of Selby in your scream..

  7. Funny how writing instructors in school always hammer you with the cliche “write what you know” yet when a guy like you comes along, who rips it out, who’s been there and done that… That’s the guy they shit on for not writing pure fiction… Clowns like that make me laugh.

    Good stuff here Steve. I’ve taken a page from your book, started writing about the real thing, the real wounds. Still love Jones Inn, the juice from the writing is fresh, raw, primal. Same with this piece here, fresh, raw, primal, just more polished with age and practice.

    Your old man hurt you when you were a kid, he obviously wants to continue hurting you. Following you around on the net, pathetic. You lived your life. Don’t regret it. He’s a ghost not happy with the reality you write.

    Glad the suicide mind didn’t get you in ‘o7. Looking forward to the next time we jump in a convertible and go dancing ’til we can’t move…

    Hart-
    http://incoldblogger.blogspot.com/search?q=hart+fisher
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MzyxXZrXOA0

  8. Aaron Golbeck Avatar
    Aaron Golbeck

    Thank you for that. This was for me the perfect read at the right time.

    The reason I’ve always wanted to write is to communicate for another person that seed of relief I find in the works of certain writers. Respite from the abyss, charmed for a moment away from staring paralyzed into the void – however you want to describe it – this is I think the use of good art.

    Next time you are swarmed by your fears just remember you’ve achieved for others (me right now) that fairly noble gesture. We’re all here trying to get by, and some people take the lead and even help others to get by, and you’ve consistently done that for me at least, reading your oral histories, personal essays. This essay and your Daily Rumpus meditations on what it takes and means to write are invaluable for some of us because we are lazy and struggle with that ugly useless feeling of entitlement and mostly we do nothing and go insane from feeling mute.

    So much obliged.

  9. stephen, i loved this. so much of it, about teaching, about writing from experience, about pitching before writing, about that dreaded slush pile, it’s all so resonant and what i’ve thought or come to think over the years. i would add luck and persistence to the heap. when i started writing, i was told there was a 99% rejection rate out there, and so i took what i learned from business school (which wasn’t all unuseful as it turns out) and thought of it as a numbers game, started a spreadsheet, sent out 5-10 submissions a month. i got published before i got to 99, but years later (same spreadsheet in hand), i calculated my actual rate and i had a 94% rejection rate. i wasn’t more special than anyone else, no matter what i like to think. i’m in new york now, a place where it’s easy to get overwhelmed by the culture of advances and agents and writing to make a living. i don’t think i can stay here too long and still remember why i write, how i should write, what i must write…

  10. I love this.

    I’ve had it open as a tab all week, slowly reading paragraphs here and there, not wanting it to end.

    Thank you for writing it!

  11. These words feel different from other words. They felt as if they needed to be written by you and not as if they were written for me. They felt honest and full of weight.

    I did the same thing as Meagan, I see. I kept this piece open all week, slowly reading paragraphs here and there and finally reading the whole thing from start to finish this morning.

    The lines that struck me:

    “We came to writing at an earlier age, from an urge to release a scream that had stuck in our throats.”

    “More than anything, writing is what I want to do with my time.”

    “The vast majority of my time is spent revising, the manuscript decreasing then expanding ever so slightly as I cut and insert, like breathing.”

    I hope that one day I’m able to write whatever my version of this might be.

  12. Thank you very much. I’ve read this a few times since it was posted and thank you.

  13. I’ve read this piece several times, each with pleasure. But I don’t share your confidence in the slush pile. Or perhaps what I mean is that if the slush pile really works, then all those writers with myriad rejections need to draw the conclusion that their work is rotten and they should quit.

    I’m not a slush pile person for another reason: conventional publishing has always been a means of dissemination from writer’s desk to reader’s hands. That’s no longer necessary. Do you want to be read? Then forget the old ways, use electronic means, and safeguard your independence at the same time.

    Writers should concentrate on their writing, not on scrabbling to be published.

  14. Katie Salt Avatar
    Katie Salt

    Steve, I relished this. Thank you.

  15. gosh this was a great & inspiring read. thanks for it.

  16. This is one of the most honest pieces of writing about writing I’ve ever read.

    Thank you so much.

    I have join the other commentators in disagreeing with your slush pile comment, though. Right now, over the last four years, I’m at a 1 in 200 acceptance rate. Just sucks man, even though I don’t suck — I have an MFA and I workshop my stories multiple times and sometimes wait years to send them out. The slush pile feels extremely undemocratic — I don’t feel like I’m getting my shot.

  17. Hi Jimmy,

    I just think the slushpile is the way to go. It worked for me. Make sure the places your sending your work are serious about the slushpile. Like The Alaska Quarterly, The Missouri Review. McSweeney’s is also very good about it. Zyzzyva is also good about the slush pile. Keep publishing in these places and agents and editors will find you. You can also apply for the Stegner Fellowship, which is a blind admissions process. I didn’t get an agent until after I had published my fourth novel, and he found me. So I know it can be done.

    I have to admit that now I’m totally connected. I know everybody, it feels like sometimes. But it didn’t start like that. Slushpile. That’s the way.

    stephen

  18. Wonderful piece — and so honest! Thank you.

  19. James Kilgore Avatar
    James Kilgore

    I like your connection between experience and writing. I also have the experience of writing stories while incarcerated, though at the other end of my life. I came to prison with a wealth of experience writing very structured academic and educational materials. I always planned meticulously before writing. Then in prison my “Nile” started to flow. I just sat there on my hardass bunk with my BIC pen and wrote until my back couldn’t take it any more. But the flow was there. Sometimes my Nile stayed in Egypt, other times it took a detour somewhere near Argentina. I think it worked both at a literary level qnd as a way to mediate the experience of the madness which surrounds. The experience drove the writing.

  20. Thanks, Steve–remembering hearing you rap in ’04 at 826 Valencia on Mission at a nonfiction panel Dave Eggers organized, about how you filled your notebooks with stuff and that you only used one quarter of that eventually. One of the things I’m working on is persona in a writing voice, authority–saying something because it needs to be said and not qualifying anything or looking over your shoulder, knowing it is a partial truth but still belongs to you.

    I return to the river of inspiration. It’s always flowing, and I ignore it at my peril, and it’s like faith, somehow, believing that the practice of both writing and sending stuff out is like breathing, inhaling and exhaling into the world. Because you can’t not do it. What comes out of that–you trust the process. You return to what needs to be said.

    I just got back from my first writer’s colony, and I’m finishing up my MFA, considering going on the academic market. I also struggle with depression and I write about it as well. Your piece brought me back to my core, away from impressing people at the dinner table at the colony or trying to be a perfect teacher. I’m a good teacher when I’m doing my own writing. Like you said, writing helps me deal with everything else.

    Keep writing real, your real.
    Joanthan

  21. Wow. This leaves me sick to my stomach but also inspired. You speak the truth, brother, but it isn’t always easy to hear. It makes me want to go write. Thanks for all that you put out here, Stephen. You are an inspiration.

    Peace,
    Richard
    Neo-noir

  22. I love this. I’m inspired. I’m going to write right now.

  23. Melissa Strong Avatar
    Melissa Strong

    I bought your book at the reading you gave in New Orleans at Antenna, spent the next day reading it – thank you again for signing it. Now I have stumbled upon your essay as I look to buy The Adderall Diaries. You have a fine craft.

  24. Bravo, Stephen! Excellent article. I reckon I am about as far underground and outside of the margin as a writer can be! I haven’t read your work yet but I will now. Check out my book on the website http://www.artbyantoniogattorno.com
    Let me know if you’re interested in a trade. Sometimes not being an independent restricts a writer’s ability to swap books with others. If that’s the case, don’t worry about it. Are you familiar with Billy Childish or Irving Stettner? Two profoundly different writers, each with some stuff thats well worth the read! Peace…
    Sean

  25. Sam Jasper Avatar
    Sam Jasper

    Thanks Steve. I was the woman who ran out of the building at the end of your reading in New Orleans. I found myself clutching a pillar outside the place muttering, “Secrets and Lies” over and over again. Thought I was having a total come apart because you hit some things so close to the bone for me. My friends took me out, gave me liquor, calmed me down, and we talked—about writing–for hours. I then went home and started reading Adderall Diaries. I didn’t move until it was finished.

    Since then, although I’m still struggling, I have decided that there will be no more “some people might remember it differently” for me. I am considering a new bit of ink that says, No Equivocation. Gotta find room for that somewhere. It’s a hell of a thing to get there finally so late in the game, but better late as they say.

    Perhaps I should have them tattoo it across my saggy butt, and leave a needle tip in there so everytime I sit down I get a zap reminding me of those two words. Nah, too extreme even for me.

    Thank you so much. I don’t know how to write naturally about anything but what I see or how I feel about what I see. I thought for a very long time that I was an anamoly. You’ve made me feel far less so.

    BTW loved Adderall even if I did hyperventilate while reading certain passages that seemed torn out of my own life.

  26. Kafka used to say writing is a form of prayer. That’s exactly what this piece is. It’s beautifully said.

    Thanks for the illumination and wisdom, Stephen!

  27. Dean Gammon Avatar
    Dean Gammon

    Stephen, I have just finished reading Adderall Diaries. This is now the third book of yours that i have read. I feel it is your best to date surpassing Habby Baby. i have written a personal letter on how this has impacted on me. Is it possible that i can send this to you, either email or letter. I am in the UK. i hope this is not too intrusive!

  28. Hi Stephen. I saw you in the DIY movie and was inspired to buy “The Adderall Diaries”, which I LOVE, and that book led me to this website, where I became quickly and fully obsessed! In a good way! Thank you for inspiring me!

  29. Jack Heern Avatar
    Jack Heern

    Incredible.

  30. Diane Bedell Avatar
    Diane Bedell

    Wonderful piece. Hopeful. Humble. Honest. I feel relief after reading it.

  31. Darren Avatar
    Darren

    I am really inspired by this, thank you

  32. Honest.Powerful.Like a stinging slap. For some to action perchance!?

  33. Stephanie Avatar
    Stephanie

    Phew. I am so glad I found this piece. Thank you for writing it. I never wanted to teach but I have found myself edging toward it in my writing program because “it looks good.” But you are right – the pay is horrible, and it is a lot of work if you don’t really want to do it. I would so much rather be a bartender.

  34. Stephen, I’ve only read the first part (I) of this, but this is amazing stuff! I can’t wait to read Happy Baby now. Then I’ll go on to part II and so forth, if I have the patience to read you in chronological order! (oh, but I forgot I read the Adderall Diaries already! shoot! no matter — I can reread it when I’m done….)

  35. Damn, I wish I had a friend or two like you who I could meet for beers and talk out this curse/blessing of a vocation. Particularly now as I slog through a two-year-stale manuscript that I sometimes love and mostly abhor and my very enthusiastic agent just wants to sell already. Your exquisitely honest (and accurate) essay will have to suffice, but the next time I’m in a pub I’ll pour one for my west coast homie.

    Thanks for this.

  36. Sometimes you make it so easy to love you, Stephen.

  37. I think this was the first thing I ever read on the Rumpus back when it was first published. I guess one of my NOLA writer friends Sam or Mark must have forwarded it. Rereading it today, it means something totally different to me now than it did last year. This essay, The Adderall Diaries, the Daily Rumpus, have all had a huge effect on how I write and how I think about writing. I’m writing more now, I’m writing almost every day, and I’m digging deeper.

    Thanks, Stephen.

  38. Wonderful essay. I would say, however, some of the best American writing is on TV– The Wire, Mad Men, Breaking Bad, Friday Night Lights, The Sopranos. It is as literate, emotionally true and thought provoking as any fiction published.

  39. Heard of a book that kind of has me in it Stephen, I would love it if you could let me know which one so I can get it……but I am so glad to see you are doing great after all we went through!

  40. This was a refreshing article to stumble across. The writing I enjoy the most is from my own life. The writing I enjoy reading the most is from other people’s lives. With a similar background (home life, streets, drugs, etc.), I have come at the writing life from an unstructured place. It started very young. Writing and music, to me, are a lifeline. I don’t drink or do drugs anymore. I don’t force myself to fit into molds that make me self-destruct, based on hard experience. Writing and music are my drug and they help me make meaning of seeming nonsense. I do write freelance articles, but only if they teach me something, help a local business, or are enjoyable to write. I’ve attempted to write a couple of fiction stories–the best ones always end up being disguised non-fiction.

    What I like most here is what you are alluding to…that when you follow your own drum/meaning/purpose in your art, it works, and when you ignore it for outside reasons that don’t inspire you deep down, you lose it, thus stultifying what makes your art your art.

  41. The first paragarph of yours reminds me of the time when my mother’s lying dying in our living room day bed. I didn’t find my voice then, but I remember scribbling everything down in my diary till very late at night sometimes. Even after my mother’s death, i still kept writing diaries that way. Until one day, I felt too depressed to keep those diaries and wanted to start my life anew. I ripped a few pages worth keeping off and threw all the diary books, seven thick books, in a public trash can on the street at an entrance to subway. Some people got interested what I was doing. Thinking about it, I wonder if those seven books were found and read by anyone.

  42. I really really really want to admire the honesty in this piece but it reads just a little too polished, a touch too self-aware, like a well-fitted backstory. Missed it by that much, says Maxwell Smart, his fingers mere ticks apart. I laugh, not at Smart’s silliness, but because hope is funny. What else to do with it, eh?

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