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Tag Archives: writing

Inspired to emulation

10 Tuesday Jan 2017

Posted by la Clarina in Books, Scribbling

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David Corbett, emulation, ideal reader, imitation, inspiration, Reading, reading and writing, Saul Bellow, Writer Unboxed, writing

readwriteI think I already told you about Writer Unboxed, a lovely writerly site, full of good ideas, thought-provoking questions, fine articles, practical wisdom, and so on.

Well, today on WU, David Corbett posed the question of reading or not reading while writing. He begins by observing that many writers seem to prefer not to – to avoid the risk of imitation, mostly – and then goes on to make a very convincing case for the opposite course of action. Continue reading →

November Reckoning

29 Tuesday Nov 2016

Posted by la Clarina in Scribbling

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drafts, NaNoWriMo, November, writing

sn4wrimo16Well well well – would you believe it? But weeks do fly, don’t they? A heartbeat ago it was october, and now it’s so very nearly the end of November that it makes no difference. So it would seem that it’s reckoning time: how did SN4WriMo go?

Let us say, well enough.

One the one hand, this fourth draft was meant mostly as an effort to make the language smoother – and that I finished with a good week to spare. Continue reading →

No NaNoWriMo

27 Thursday Oct 2016

Posted by la Clarina in Scribbling

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fourth draft, Karavansara, NaNoWriMo, November, writing

novemberThis post on Karavansara made me jump: good heavens above, is it that time of the year again already?

And of course it is, and it will be November in a few days, and so it is even late to begin to think about doing NaNoWriMo – but the fact is that, even if I had not lost track of time and planned ahead… er. It’s always the same story: much as I like the notion of a month-long concentrated effort with an artificial but solid enough deadline, November is always about the very worst time for it. Continue reading →

Fourth Draft

04 Tuesday Oct 2016

Posted by la Clarina in Scribbling

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fourth draft, Language, non-native speaker, writing

untitled-13So, October is here, a full month has passed – and here we go.

Fourth draft, bearing in mind what I learned in Oxford. Mostly, that I need to trim the language…

“I’m not saying you make it easy for the reader,” I was told. “Just don’t make it so hard that they’ll give up.”

Sound advice. Not that I was deliberately trying to make it hard, mind you – only it seems that my grasp of what is “too hard” may need some adjusting. Also, I may have let myself be carried away with Elizabethan English. A little.

So now that’s what I’m aiming for: Elizabethan colour – just not too much.

I’ll let you know.

Salva

Words in History

21 Tuesday Jun 2016

Posted by la Clarina in History, Things

≈ 5 Comments

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anachronism, English language, historical thesaurus, History, Oxford Thesaurus, University of Glasgow, writing

Do you know the Historical Thesaurus of English?

HistoricalThesaurus

It’s a project of the University of Glasgow, providing information on the history of nearly 800000 words. It… Continue reading →

The Realm

21 Saturday May 2016

Posted by la Clarina in History

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Historical fiction, History, Milan Kundera, The Curtain, writing

KunderaA little Saturday thought, from Milan Kundera’s The Curtain.

Something about history, and truth, and what – and how – is remembered or forgotten.

Something that goes very well with my own pet theory about the iridescence of history…

Says Kundera:

This is the most obvious thing in the world: man is separated from the past (even from the past only a few seconds old) by two forces that go instantly to work and cooperate: the force of forgetting (which erases) and the force of memory (which transforms).

It is the most obvious thing, but it is hard to accept, for when one thinks it all the way through, what becomes of all the testimonies that historiography relies on? What becomes of our certainties about the past, and what becomes of History itself, to which we refer every day in good faith, naively, spontaneously? Beyond the slender margin of the incontestable (there is no doubt that Napoleon lost the battle of Waterloo), stretches an infinite realm: the realm of the approximate, the invented, the deformed, the simplistic, the exaggerated, the misconstrued, an infinite realm of nontruths that copulate, multiply like rats, and become immortal.

A realm that, I might add, makes for wonderful hunting grounds, when you happen to write historical fiction…

A Scrap of Squared Paper

28 Thursday Apr 2016

Posted by la Clarina in Scribbling, Things

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finds, Kit Marlowe, notebook, Thomas Walsingham, writing

ScrapIt turns up in a book I hadn’t opened in some time. It slips out from between two pages, and flutters its way to the carpet before I can catch it.

It’s a scrap of squared paper, a leaf from some old notepad from my previous life, carrying an ugly yellow logo and covered in many-coloured scribbles.

First of all, written in blue ball-point pen, a snippet of dialogue between Kit Marlowe and Thomas Walsingham… Continue reading →

What we do

24 Thursday Mar 2016

Posted by la Clarina in Things

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Bruxelles, Charles De Lint, Karavansara, writing

flameBW3I’ve posted something very similar on my Italian blog, yesterday, but I want to do it again here, because…

Well, because terrible things keep happening, and everything seems to indicate that they will keep happening for Heaven knows how long. I was musing about it yesterday, and thinking how small, how inadequate it feels in such moments to sit down and write of history, and theatre, and books…

Then I found on Karavansara a quote of Charles De Lint’s, saying how writers keep shining little lights in the gathering darkness.

And I thought: yes, this is it. This is what I want to do too. Light up a little flame, and hope it will make readers think. Not to make them think something in particular – that readers can agree or disagree with what they read is a given… just think. And wonder, and ask questions, and maybe read up some author or historical character, or read a new book, or argue, or get angry, and light another flame…  One hopes to make think – and to keep thinking, even in the midst of all the terrible things.

So yes – this is what we do with the stories, and history, and books, and theatre, in the firm belief that a thinking world will be better equipped against the darkness, and even the smallest light can help.

 

Of comfort zones and mentors

01 Tuesday Mar 2016

Posted by la Clarina in Scribbling, Things

≈ 4 Comments

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comfort zone, mentor, writing

MentorI must say that I greatly miss my mentor.

He was one of Italy’s great paediatricians, and also a philosopher and the author of a few groundbreaking books about medical ethics. Hardly the right mentor for a historical novelist and playwright, one might think – except that he also was deeply and passionately knowledgeable about opera, literature, theatre, cinema – and the greatest and most enlightened president the Accademia Nazionale Virgiliana ever had. Quite the Renaissance man – and a wonderful teacher and mentor to boot… Continue reading →

Second Language

02 Tuesday Feb 2016

Posted by la Clarina in Lostintranslation, Scribbling

≈ 5 Comments

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Sasha A. Palmer, second language, writing

LanguageThis one I’m pilfering straight from Karavansara – where my friend Dave posted a link to Sasha A. Palmer’s article about Five benefits of writing in your second language.

Well, I write in my second language and Joseph Conrad is one of my literary heroes, and whenever I approach a new language, I can’t wait to play games with it, to use it, to tell stories: the article just beckoned – and thank you, D.

Did I find it interesting? Very. Do I agree with Palmer’s view of the matter? Not entirely. Or perhaps, not that much, considering that I can subscribe to two and a half out of her five points… Continue reading →

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