Dear Steve,
I’m really glad you asked this question in my memoir writing workshop last week:
“What three qualities do people who complete their memoir have?”
Since then, I’ve consulted two authors of published memoirs who sent me their three qualities. Then, I came up with four. All in all, we now have ten personal qualities that help lead to a completed memoir.
Ronald Mackay, author of A Scotsman Abroad http://editura.mttlc.ro/ronald-mackay-scotsman-abroad.html (about a two-year period of his life in Romania, and published on line by the University of Bucharest in 2016) sent me these:
“Be daring”: I found I needed to ‘screw my courage to the sticking place’ just to overcome self-doubt and the fear of appearing self-indulgent by writing about my own life.
“Avoid temptation”: When I worked in Bucharest, I was a ‘babe-in-the-woods’. Nevertheless, I decided to write from that ingenuous perspective and not as my older, hopefully wiser, self.
“Plow on regardless”: While I might forget precise dates, the names of places and people and exact details, I avoided being slowed up by research that would have added little value.
Sheila Wright, author of Amare: A True Italian Love Story https://www.chapters.indigo.ca/en-ca/books/amare-a-true-italian-love (about falling in love in, and with, Italy, was published by iUniverse in 2009), sent me the following:
A strong feeling of urgency and inevitability. Almost like giving birth, once the story had grown inside of me, there was no keeping it from coming out.
A belief that I have universal truths to express, that readers will relate to me and find common ground. Maybe even see themselves in my story and say “Yes, I have felt that!”
A strong history of journalling — that desire to record and remember. And perhaps a fear of losing those precious memories. I want to keep them fresh for myself, and for my children.
And mine, which are everywhere in my book The Gift of Memoir, but not in this succinct organized fashion:
The self-discipline to show up. Making the commitment to write a certain number of hours a day or week, then actually sitting down and writing, is crucial. Freeing up the space to create – or re-create – your world in words, gives you the freedom to enter the past. As Margaret Atwood put it, ya gotta “get ass in chair.”
Curiosity. Writing a memoir is setting out on an adventure. Like deep sea diving, or hiking the Camino trail, it is the anticipation of unknown discoveries that grabs your imagination. What will you remember that you had forgotten? What will you learn about yourself? What will it feel like when your book is in your hands, bound in a form meant to last through the generations?
Generosity. When you write your stories, you give to others. Every sentence, and the thought behind it, is a gift to someone who will one day read your stories. “Give, give, give; write, write, write,” is a message from your generous higher self.
Trust. Trust that you will get there. Writing a memoir is a journey. It has a beginning, then it has pitfalls, great highs, doldrums, night sweats, gems, and then it has an ending. Of course, the raft on which you are crossing the ocean may be rammed and broken into pieces by a maddened humpback whale (its partner endangered by whalers), leaving you treading water … but along comes a sail boat and picks you up. Picks you up. Somehow, changed in some way, you get there … to journey’s end.
Steve, many thanks for inspiring me with your question. I hope you get a chance to read A Scotsman Abroad (free on line) and Amare: A True Italian Love Story (available at Indigo).
Diane
You are so wise, dear Diane. Thanks to you and the other authors Sheila and Ronald for sharing these nuggets.
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I’ve been called many things, but never wise! I, too, love what Sheila and Ronald had to say. More and more I believe in the power of personal stories.
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Well done, Diane – No wonder you finished your own memoir so beautifully
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Thanks, Carol. I’d never have put these ideas together if it hadn’t been for Steve’s brilliant question that inspired me.
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Great idea to gather these quotes Diane, and not only for memoir writers, because they have wise words for all writers.
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Indeed. Andrea. Your own writing is filled with generosity and curiosity, and all the others.
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Much wisdom here, not only for memoir writing but also for living life.
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… on land or sea! Thanks, Lisa.
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Reblogged this on Memoir Notes.
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Thanks for reblogging! And the finest congratulations on publishing your memoir, Even Rain is Just Water. That’s an arresting title.
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Wonderful article, Diane. It’s so true that you gotta sit in the chair and do the work. I would, perhaps, add that, for certain kinds of material, sitting in the chair can expose the author to a heap of buried pain.
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Thanks, Marylee. It sounds like you have been through the process. And it’s true. What can happen, though, is that the creative act of selecting words to tell the painful story begins to fill the narrator with something new and very different from pain. Such as: a sense of satisfaction, or relief, or even beauty.
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You’re so right about the reward side of it, for sure. It’s satisfying to hold a book in one’s hands and to know that in that book is contained your truth.
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I’m reading your book and just loving it. Your writing is beautiful and the depth of experience behind the words is evident. I’d very much like to have you write a guest blog for my http://maryleemacdonaldauthor.com site. I don’t want to interrupt what else you have going on (which is another book, I hope), so perhaps you might consider if there are any “outtakes” from the book. Also, I’d happily post an excerpt from the book.
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Thank you for the kind words about my book. I would be pleased to write something for a guest post, but am busy with writing projects now and for the foreseeable future. I don’t understand ‘outtakes’. You are more than welcome to post an excerpt from the book. Your books look very interesting. Keep writing.
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Well, outtakes are just the fragments that don’t make it into a book but that are still worthy of publication. I’m glad to know you have more books forthcoming, and I’m sure that your focus will bring them to fruition. Thank for allowing me to republish an excerpt. I will let you know what I’ve chosen. I hope it will bring you many new readers.
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Thank you!
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Very interesting description of qualities a memoir writer should have or has. However, I think being able to discipline oneself and having trust and courage is a huge necessity for any creative person.
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You’re right, and I’m glad you expanded the horizon from memoir to other creative endeavours – like painting, or dance, or theatre,
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I like this…. “A strong feeling of urgency and inevitability. Almost like giving birth, once the story had grown inside of me, there was no keeping it from coming out.”
I can relate to this so much, as writing my memoir had become THE thing I lived to do…(and now it’s THE thing I am trying to get published!)
The inevitability part is so true as well….there’s nothing that can prevent it from happening if it’s there.
I like the way you expressed this. Thanks Diane!
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Thanks for this. I have just started writing autobiographical pieces on my blog, some of it about remembrance, Re-Memoir: https://mrmatthewruddle.wordpress.com/
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Matthew, I read some of your memoir pieces and really enjoyed them. You have a way of putting the reader right there.
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Thank you for the compliment, and for taking the time to read some of my work. I really appreciate it.
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I needed this post, Diane. Thank you for this feast of encouragement. “Curiosity” and “Plowing on regardless” are the two points sticking to my writing ribs now. I will persevere with my edits, revisions, and research now that I’ve passed the first draft stage. I need to visit your blog more often.
Blessings ~ Wendy
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I think your writing ribs have a lot of meat on them!
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Thank you, Diane. 🙂 With the help of critiques and edits I hope to beef it up where needed and trim the fat too. 😉
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