Only
recently, after thirteen years of writing, did I made a curious discovery. On
the surface and without reflection, it had seemed as if I was just ‘writing to
write.’ Never mind that the exercise produced very satisfying results. I would
jump from one idea to the next without focus or direction. Or so I thought.
But
after pounding out twelve novels, an investment guide, a serialized novella, a
children’s book, four screenplays, fourteen plays (four of which have been
produced), and over six hundred blogs, I slowly began to recognize a vague yet
discernable pattern to this writing madness of mine.
This
realization crept into my consciousness a couple of weeks ago as I was
knee-deep in leaves and yard waste. Amid deep breaths of my out-of-shape
workout, I realized there was inspiration for everything I’ve written thus far.
Most of the time, it was neatly hidden beneath events, circumstances and
seemingly innocent happenstance. But then I realized that a direct inspiration
and results could be found in almost every story I’ve told.
I’ve often mentioned that my first ventures into storytelling began with the writing of two western novels on my trusty old L.C. Smith typewriter. Back in the early Seventies, we were living in Reisterstown, Maryland and I was working at the Maryland Center for Public Broadcasting. I decided to try my hand at storytelling one of my favorite topics; the American West.
Fast-forward almost forty years later and ‘Apache Death Wind; the trilogy’ and ‘Apache Blue Eyes’ were re-born out of that first pass at writing.
My second writing marathon was a semi-autobiographical novel set in the mid-Sixties. The novel pretty accurately followed my own storyline, minus time spent in Vietnam and not getting the girl in the end. Otherwise, it had all the same pathos, angst, heartbreak and redemption of your typical ‘coming-of-age’ (sort of) novel.
Fast-forward to the present and I wrote a serialized novella called ‘Agnes, Memories of First Love.’ It was also set in the mid-Sixties and chronicled my first job after returning from Europe and my first steps toward a career in television production and distribution. Oh, and a love affair that never happened…but could have.
Palm Springs has defined our second lifestyle for over twelve years now, not counting the initial eight, when we were first visitors there. In homage to that world-famous Candy Land of hope and illusion, I wanted to write a soap opera centered on some of the real and fictional people who live there. I’ve met a number of the characters it seems to attract and the ‘almost anything goes’ vibe, that is a part of the landscape. Hence the ‘Debris trilogy’ was born.
My
fourth play ‘Polly’s Amorous Adventures’ was also produced in Palm Springs and
spoke to the uniqueness of the place. It certainly isn’t Mayberry.
Before
‘Polly,’ I had three plays produced in Minnesota. The first was an offering to
a new theatrical troupe called Second Act Players and made up of senior actors.
‘Riot at Sage Corner’ was followed by ‘Club Two Ten’ which was reminiscent of
my own home room in high school. ‘The Last Sentinel’ reflected advancing age that
many of my friends and I were facing.
Departing
from my novel, play, screenplay routine, I thought an easy-to-read reference
book on real estate might be interesting to write. My apartment management book
was a ‘how-to,’ ‘don’t to this’ reference book on the trials and tribulations
of managing multi-unit apartment buildings.
I
always wanted to try my hand at writing a mystery novel. My first attempt at
writing a suspense thriller was an almost six hundred page novel that took me
traveling around the world. A YA (Young Adult) version called ‘Chasing Ophelia’
followed soon after. Someplace in that mix of time and new material, I also managed
to write four screenplays.
Recently
I revisited the mystery genre with ‘Playground for the Devil’ which
incorporated a sassy companion and more sexual references. Maturity on my part,
I’m not sure, but it was a fun story to imagine and write.
One
of my six new plays, ready to be produced, has gone through an interesting
metamorphosis. PTV started out as a straightforward stage play about the
transitional period in public television when it evolved from instructional
television to public television. That seemed to go nowhere so I added eight new
songs and a different approach to my storytelling. When that also seemed to
stall out, I happened upon the play ‘Spamalot’ and found a brand new approach
that I hope might be the catalyst for the winning format that has eluded me
thus far.
Waleed, the skinny hippo was a children’s story I wrote almost fifteen years ago. It finally found a home last winter with a wonderful illustrator out of Bangladesh and a Swahili translator out of Kenya, South Africa. Now two more translations into Hmong and Spanish are in the works.
My
newest venture, if I can get it off the ground, is a comic strip based on the
real and imagined lives of my five grandchildren (at a younger age). ‘Sweet pea
and the Gang’ has all the hallmarks of another fun venture I’m anxious to
begin. Like everything else I write, its outcome is never guaranteed and
marketing success always a challenge.
But
I’m confident that if I can keep mining that vast field of my past memories,
images, and what-ifs; I can keep coming up with new writing projects. These last
seventy-nine years on the planet have fueled a cauldron of great plots, people, and places to write about.
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