A New York Times essay recently stated that modern fiction has lost its faith ...
that Christian belief figures into literary fiction in our place and time as something
between a dead language and a hangover.
I believe it is worse than that:
many books seem to have lost touch with the soul, the wonder, and the magic
without which our prose tales are shallow pursuits of sensory titillation.
WE HAVE LOST THE MAGIC
There is a land not too far from where you sit right now.
Its velvet grasses miss the press of your feet.
The billowing clouds strain to see your body walk slowly up the rising hill.
The fragrant winds blow through the lonely tree branches,
whispering your name as they seek some trace of you.
It is where the magic lives.
That realm is lonely, wondering where you have been.
And where have you and I been?
We have been caught up in the drudgery that writing has become.
Burdened by life's duties and our own doubts,
Battered by the fears of the plague at our doors,
we have lost our way.
We have lost the magic.
Did we lose it straining for that first perfect sentence in our new novel?
Looking at the blank, impatient computer monitor
did we forget the simple wonder of just writing the first simple sentence that occurred to us?
That creative power which bubbles so tingly at the beginning of our book quiets down after a time.
The journey becomes slower and slower, the inertia of doubt steadily dragging our steps.
Do we continue doggedly on or do we stop to refresh ourselves?
The answer to that question determines whether we find our way back to the magic or not.
How do we refresh ourselves?
How do we refresh ourselves on a long wilderness walk? We stop by a stream and drink.
Drink of those poets and writers who sparked that love of the written word spoken in the lonely heart of the reader.
As a hiker takes shade under the canopy of a huge oak,
listen to the music of those artists who stirred you to imagine images that you just had to write and make live in your own way.
Then, you shall write as a child writes ...
not thinking of a result but thinking in terms of discovery as if you were hiking once again where the magic lives.
It is the Zen of writing:
the creation takes place between your fingers and the keyboard,
not before in a thought or afterwards in a recasting.
The magic is there waiting for you. It will come if you but get out of its way and let it in.
That's so true. A lot of us allow ourselves to get halted by the expectations of the professional writing world and we don't allow our true spirits to come out and write the first draft. Something we should remind ourselves to do when we sit down to write.
ReplyDeleteExactly. Even master painters do a rough sketch of their painting first to get an idea of what they want to do. :-)
DeleteI think the last two years has caused a lot of that loss of magic. We do need to get it back.
ReplyDeleteI remind myself that Robert Louis Stevenson wrote all of his classic works while spitting up blood.
DeleteHow magical! We need to dream. :)
ReplyDeleteWithout a dream to spur us on, we soon run out of steam, right, Helen? :-)
DeleteDear Roland:
ReplyDeleteI do not believe you’ve lost your magic. Beautiful words and beautifully stated.
Happy IWSG day :)
Happy IWSG Day to you, too, Erika. Being a rare blood courier drains me most day, but I still try to write something. Lately, I have been studying stage magic to get my former O.S.S. agent into and out of trouble in 1947 Vienna during the filming of THE THIRD MAN. Thanks for the nice words about my post. :-)
DeleteHere's to the resurgence of magic in all of our writing, but you have to set the course, Captain Roland. We depend on you.
ReplyDeleteMay 2022 treat you kindly and bring more inspiration than ever.
That is so very nice of you to say, Lee. It may take me a whole year to write my Vienna thriller set in 1947. I am studying stage magic to instill writing magic into NO RESHOOTS FOR DEATH.
DeleteStage magicians' flash paper (used to make those dramatic flares to mask the secret to the tricks ) contain magnesium ... and burning magnesium emits ultra-violet light, the same as comes from the sun. So my stage magician successfully contends with a Vampire Empress.
Never underestimate a former O.S.S. agent!
May 2022 treat us all kindly. :-) Sorry for being so late in responding, but blood runs had me all over Louisiana tonight! Whew!
It's become all about making money. Although I am a little miffed at that New York Times essay.
ReplyDeleteCritics think they know more than they do I believe. If they really knew, they would be writing novels, right, Diane?
DeleteWe do need to reclaim the magic and let it be part of the writing world again. And the world in general.
ReplyDeleteThe Warrior Muse
Yes, indeed, Shannon ... part of the world in general. How back-biting many people in the world have become. :-(
DeleteAs always...beautifully said, Roland!
ReplyDeleteI try not to let the world take my magic away, it is way too important. The beauty of prose should never be stifled by negativity. We live on a stunning planet with so many wonders. Although so much has been destroyed, there is still magic lurking under the dead leaves and fallen snow. Life renewing itself in the spring is the most magical time of all!
Stay well, my friend. Wishing you the very best for 2022. May you be safe, healthy, and happy!
Wishing you the very best of everything this 2022, Michael! For me, Indian Summer is my favorite time of year: the lush colors of the turning leaves, the smell of ripening apples, the sting of burning leaves in the air, the promise of one last Hurrah before the white shroud of snow covers everything. Stay well, my friend, Roland
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