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April 01, 2008

The Inuksuit Script

Too often corporate writing assignments go like this: I'm given an obscure list of "keys" or "platforms" (bullet points from a hideous PowerPoint presentation) that I have to make fit with a half-baked, overarching theme.


A theme like, "ACME...we've got what you need."


So I take all of the disparate elements, juggle them around in my synthesizing, lateral-thinking machine, and spit out ideas that meld the previously incongruous concepts together into a compromise that will make all parties reasonably happy. And while I'm very good at this—creating a glue of content that keeps corporate meetings, speeches, videos and other presentations from collapsing on themselves—I prefer those projects where I truly learn something. Like the one I got yesterday.


Yesterday a client gave me an assignment to write a video script on inuksuit, those sculptures of uncut stones created by the Inuit people to guide hunters and provide solace to lonely travelers. What's cool about this is that I'm actually learning stuff, and the bridge between the concept of inuksuit and the company department hosting the conference is not that far-fetched. It's a pleasure to work on this because someone smart obviously spent a good deal of time doing the pre-think or, as they say in TV-speak, the pre-production.


I need to get back to work now, but I'd like to leave you with three photos of inuksuit. Hopefully they'll inspire you to go learn more about them yourself.



An inuksuk



Another inuksuk



And another inuksuk


March 21, 2008

Surprise Causes Writer to Choke on Big Mac

The first time I read John Irving's The World According to Garp, I choked on a Big Mac.


It was a cold March day 15 years ago, and I was in a McDonald's in Norwich, New York, eating lunch, when a passage took me by such complete surprise that I started choking.


Reluctant to suffer an ignominious death in a Mickey D’s, I dropped the book and looked around clutching my throat. Thankfully, an old-timer saw what was happening, jumped up from his seat and gave me the Heimlich (he was remarkably spry as I recall). The food dislodged. (Never mind where it went. Gross.)



The food I almost choked on

What I was eating when Irving's book surprised me.


"What the hell happened?" he asked.


"Something surprised me," I said, nodding at the book. "Something I read."


"Well, you probably shouldn't eat while you're reading then."


"Probably not, sir. Thank you."


As I sat down, I glanced at the book that had nearly caused my death. I realized that, while I didn't want to cause readers of my own writing to choke in fast-food restaurants, I did want to emulate Irving's ability to surprise them—the smile-inducing sentence; the word choice that evokes a gentle shake of the head; and best of all, the memorable, unexpected scene.



Cover of The World According to Garp, hardcover

The hardcover version. I wore out my paperback.


From the first, what grabbed me most about the novel was its delicious unpredictability. Take the first line, for example. I can quote it from memory:


Garp's mother, Jenny Fields, was arrested in Boston in 1942 for wounding a man in a movie theater.


This was, and still is as far as I'm concerned, one of the best opening lines of a novel ever. The key word, of course, is "wounding." From time to time, I consider the dozen other words he could have used there, and I realize what a surprising and brilliant choice "wounding" was.  Stabbing? No, too specific, too violent. Injuring? No, too vague. What about "lacerating" or "contusing"? Afraid not. "Wounding" was, and still is, perfect. The questions that "wounding" raises, and doesn't answer, are what entice the reader to continue.


The famous Russian short story writer and playwright, Anton Chekhov, once said the following (I paraphrase): "If a gun hangs above the door in the first act, it must go off in the last act." As a student of Irving who has read Garp and one of his other excellent novels, A Prayer for Owen Meany, at least a dozen times, I'm convinced that Irving must have held Chekhov's view—at least subconsciously—because nothing gets wasted in the story. Every character trait, setting detail and conflict is important, they all build to the climax, and along the way there are hundreds of surprises.


Today, looking out my window and watching the shaking trees, I remember that fateful day in McDonald's when I not only learned to be careful trying to eat and read at the same time, but also the value of surprise in writing. Shortly after that episode, I wrote something on an index card that I've kept on a bulletin board ever since. It's a piece of advice to myself that I've tried to heed in everything I write. Many times I've fallen short, but once in a while I nail it, and here it is:


Put a surprise on every page.


It’s the surprises that keep me reading.


It's the surprises that keep me writing.


It’s the surprises that make life worth living.

February 28, 2008

Self-Employment Has Its Advantages

I received an email today from an old friend whose company just cut all employees' pay by 15%. It's a damn outrage, and I really feel for this person.


At the same time, when I see people I know (not nameless, faceless statistics) being treated this way by corporations, it's a reminder to me of the advantages of self-employment. The advantages are few, but there's one that's tough to beat: a company can't suddenly decide to pay me 15% less than the rate we agreed to. That's what contracts and purchase orders are for. The disadvantages are obvious: sporadic work (unsteady paychecks), fewer opportunities for socializing, and no cafeteria. The killer is the no cafeteria.





A super informative article on companies screwing workers.


Back in 2002, when I took a voluntary severance package from Merrill Lynch (sweet!), I wrote an article about how companies could give a shit. It appeared in a few online publications back then, but I'd like to share it again here.


Self-employment isn't for everyone. You have to be content spending A LOT of time alone. And you need to be able to be productive without having a manager with a whip and a chair standing over you. If you can meet those two criteria, and if you can live without the cafeteria, then working for yourself might be the answer.


February 26, 2008

The West Wing Marathon

This five-minute entry is to explain why my entries have been sporadic lately. It's simple: Alexas and I are engaged in a West Wing marathon.


We were West Wing junkies when the show was on the air, but since it was canceled, none of the cable networks has carried it. (Bravo did for a short time, but I suppose the show wasn't enough like Queer Eye for their tastes.)


Besides the sharp-tongued dialogue that requires some knowledge of the Constitution, The West Wing has so many fine qualities that make it an absolute joy to watch:


  • Deputy Chief of Staff Josh Lyman's profound knowledge of Congressional procedures (for outmaneuvering those pesky lawmakers).
  • Donna Moss's kooky crusades and her lovely tight sweaters.
  • Sam & Toby's ability to write speeches on the fly, often while walking down the hall.
  • CJ's bitch-slapping of the press.
  • Leo's iron-will when dealing with subordinates.
  • Charlie's earnestness and integrity.
  • Jed Bartlet's ability to quote at length from The Bible.





The cast of my favorite modern TV show, The West Wing.


Alexas and I have been at this marathon since last Thursday—my birthday—and since we're only up to Episode 7 of Season 3, and since each season is at least 22 episodes and there are 7 seasons in total, it's gonna take a while....


Well, gotta go. Time for the show.


February 21, 2008

38 is the New 18—Right, Mr. Chandler?

Today is my 38th birthday. I know...thrilling.


As I near 40, I imagine I should feel old. But I don't. In fact, I've never been healthier—physically, emotionally or spiritually. I've learned to stop fighting Life and to allow things to happen in their own time. I've taken up golf and show some promise in the sport. And I've been alcohol-free for five years now, so I haven't woken up in alleys in Boston for quite a while. I haven't done that in 18 years, so that's something, right?





I contemplate immortality as a comic book character.


In my writing, I've made great progress in the past few years, both in terms of craft and the business. And even though my mystery novels have yet to be published, I'm not discouraged. My idol, Raymond Chandler, didn't get his first novel published until he was 50. There's hope for me yet.


And maybe it's fitting that, like Chandler, I should have to wait to be published. I want to bring to detective fiction the same high standard of style and artistry that he brought. And make no mistake, Chandler was a literary artist. A true original.


Whenever composition notebooks go on sale, I buy the suckers in bulk because I keep notebooks on every conceivable subject that interests me. One of my favorites is titled "Great Writing Examples," and it's loaded with lines by Raymond Chandler.





The notebook, in case you didn't believe me.


Most of my writing idols are Old School guys' guys: Hemingway, Parker, Doyle, MacLean, Brewer, Westlake, Fleming and Chandler. But especially Chandler. He's my touchstone.


I've read and re-read every one of his novels several times. Why? Because of my love of the line. Chandler's novels are loaded with lines that are so apt, so deliciously evocative, that I'll quote them to myself for weeks afterwards.





When I finish with one of Chandler's novels, I type out a page of
my favorite lines and tape it in my notebook. Hot, right?


Because I'm feeling frisky and generous today (after all, it is my birthday), I'm going to share a few of Chandler's best with you. Consider them a gift.


She was a blonde all right. The kind of blonde that would make a bishop kick a hole in a stained glass window.


She smelled the way the Taj Mahal looks by moonlight.


Her voice faded off into a sort of soft whisper, like a mortician asking for a down payment.


He hoisted a couple of eyebrows that would have interested a Fuller Brush man.


The house was leaking guests out into the evening air now. Voices were fading, cars were starting, goodbyes were bouncing around like rubber balls.


She went out slowly. The way she did it hadn't been learned at business college.


And the help was round-shouldered from carrying trays with drinks across the terrace to a swimming pool about the size of Lake Huron but a lot neater.


She leaned back and a pulse beat in her throat. She was exquisite, she was dark, she was deadly.


Her hair was a hot sunset.



I believe I've written a few lines as memorable as Chandler's, but you'll have to wait until the novels are published so you can decide for yourself.


Thank you for spending part of your day with me, on my birthday. The thought of your visiting makes being 38 a little more tolerable.



February 19, 2008

My Granite Reminder

Like a lot of writers, I keep a stone on my desk to use as a paperweight. But mine has a special meaning to me because it's a chunk of granite from one of the quarries my grandfather and great-grandfather worked, and every time I look at it, I'm reminded of how far the Orcutts have come.


Last summer, while working on a story that takes place off the coast of Maine, I spent some time on the island my family comes from: Vinalhaven. Tooling around the island in a friend's pickup truck, I visited the places my ancestors had lived and worked—especially the granite quarries.




My great-grandfather (far right) was one of the men who cut
the columns for the Cathedral of St. John the Divine.


In the early 1900s, granite from Vinalhaven was used for a lot of important buildings in the Northeast, including the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York City. My great-grandfather was part of the small crew that cut and shaped the columns for that impressive structure.


My grandfather also cut granite for buildings, but he did something else that I find just as impressive and that's cutting paving block. In those days, many of the streets in Boston and New York were still cobblestone, which meant that somebody had to cut those uniform-sized blocks.


According to my uncle Harris, my grandfather made 2 cents for each block. "This was during the Depression you see," Harris said. "He'd bring home forty, fifty dollars a week. Do the math. That's two thousand to twenty-five hundred stones a week. And if they weren't perfect, he didn't get paid."




Me, admiring a piece of granite one of my ancestors cut.
I wanted you to see that I really do have a granite paperweight.


Where am I going with this entry, you ask? What's my point?


My point is this: Every time I sit down at my computer and get to use my brain to make a living, I pick up my granite paperweight, feel its roughness and its heft, and think about the hard work my ancestors did that enabled me to be where I am today. Because they worked their asses off cutting stone, I'm able to indulge in creative pursuits. I like to think they'd want this, that they'd want me to do what I loved instead of just working to survive.


I'm incredibly proud of them and grateful for the sacrifices they made. The success I seek with my writing isn't just for myself. It's for them.


Continue reading "My Granite Reminder" »

February 12, 2008

The Writing Heart Wants
What the Writing Heart Wants

Some of you will disagree, but I believe we don't have as much choice about what we write as we might think.

For years, my father, Al, encouraged me to write about sex because he was convinced that sex sells. He was right, of course—sex does sell—but he was wrong, as all non-writers are when they suggest ideas or subjects for writers to use, in thinking that I could instantly adopt his idea with the enthusiasm necessary to create a book-length work.


Now, I realize that all writers have to be able to get into ideas that aren't wholly their own, but we can usually only do this when there's an outside motivator—like money. Getting paid, whether as a newspaper reporter (which I've been) or as a speechwriter (which I've also been), has a way of making you excited about whatever topics interest the client.


But more than the kind of writing we writers do, I'm really talking about the ideas we find ourselves attracted to, and where this is concerned, I believe we don't have much choice. The writing heart wants what it wants.




An HD still of me from Get Lamp, my friend Jason's upcoming
film about text adventures and interactive fiction. I used it
because my didacticism in the still matches this piece.


In my own case, part of me wishes I were more attracted to non-fiction. As a writer seeking publication, just from an odds standpoint life would be easier; there are far more nonfiction books than fiction published every year.


But again, we don't get much say in what captivates us. I have no idea why I find redheads so damn alluring, but I do. Similarly, I don't get to choose the ideas or characters or voices that grab me by the lapel and either shout or breathe hotly in my ear. Nope, they choose me.


What we write is also determined by something much more prosaic: how our brains work. I have friends who think in data, in facts. Jason, mentioned above, is one of these guys. He and people like him amaze me in their ability to consume vast quantities of information, categorize it, assimilate it, report on it, etc. This may explain why Jason leans toward documentary filmmaking and internet history/archiving. Suffice it to say, I'm not one of these fellows. I like to do what Sherlock Holmes did, which is to keep all but the most essential tools out of my "brain-attic." I have to, in fact.


I am a heavily right-brained, lateral thinker. With the exception of a few subjects that I know a lot about, I don't have a lot of information on file. The best way I can describe my thinking process (and other fiction writers I know have described a similar process) is continuously asking myself, "What if?" A person's quirky mannerism makes me wonder, "What if he did that in a bank and they misunderstood him? What would happen?" Frequently these "what-if's" lead to imagining a character, who routinely manifests as a voice. Each voice has a particular rhythm and diction, and she might be be cunning, shy, unstable, or selfish.




Why this photo? Simple: I love redheads.


The thing is, I don't get to choose the idea. The idea floating around in the ether, the one that insists on being written, chooses me, and that's that.


And as much as I'd like to write a chapter for a nonfiction book and bang out a proposal and have my agent sell the book—often just on the basis of a proposal—I can't because the writing heart wants what the writing heart wants.

February 11, 2008

Putting Dreams on the Altar

In the Book of Genesis, God tests Abraham's faith by requiring him to bind his son, Issac, to an altar and sacrifice him. We all know how the story ends: at the last minute an angel intervenes, telling Abraham not to harm the boy.


The point was that God used the thing that Abraham cared the most about—his son—to test his faith. This act has been scrutinized over the centuries by the best thinkers. In fact, one of my favorite philosophers, Søren Kierkegaard, dedicated a very good book to the subject of Abraham's faith and what it means for Faith in general.




The sentence on the cover says it all: This ain't light readin'.


The idea of putting our dreams on the altar comes from Abraham's act. Lately I've begun to wonder whether I should be writing fiction, or at least whether I should be making it the main thrust of my writing. I think my fiction is good, and this view has been corroborated by many professionals in writing and publishing, not to mention a number of readers I respect. But as good as it may be, sometimes it's a question of timing. Folks just ain't buyin' what you're sellin' right now.


I believe that everything happens for a reason, and to the point of unanswered prayers or unfulfilled dreams, I believe that sometimes God, Spirit, the Force, or the Universe (or whatever you believe governs our cosmic soup) delays giving us our heart's desires because He or It wants to give us a chance to change our minds. Imagine for a moment if we got everything we wanted exactly when we wanted it. Remember the saying, "Be careful what you ask for because you just might get it"? Being made to wait for our dreams to come to pass gives us an opportunity to change our minds, and I think that's important.


In my case, I've begun to wonder if I want to be writing mystery fiction. I've already begun to feel stymied by the genre in that the conventions are pretty rigid and formulaic, and if you have anything serious to say about the world, this clearly isn't the forum for it. I've also begun to question what good my fiction would be doing for the world.


How will another murder mystery help people to improve their lives? How will this kind of writing do anything other than provide people with a temporary escape from the drudgery of everyday life? Not that the ability to do this has no value. It does. I just don't think I'm content with that.


A part of me misses teaching. Inspiring people. Awakening people to new ideas, things they've never considered before. Raising people's confidence and self-esteem. In short, I've been wondering if I should be writing work that teaches more than it entertains.


Today I made a decision. I'm taking what has been my most precious dream for a long time—becoming a successful published author of commercial fiction—and putting it on the altar. If I need to sacrifice that dream to find my true purpose, my true calling, then I'm willing to do it.

February 07, 2008

Gems from the Notebook Drawer — Vol. 1

Dean Koontz wrote somewhere that "the first half-million words are just practice." I agree with that. I have a garage full of boxes of my writing, and a filing cabinet drawer jammed with notebooks, all of which prove his point.


Most of what I wrote there was crap because I was trying too hard. I hadn't learned the importance of restraint and proportion in a piece of writing. I hadn't read John Gardner's The Art of Fiction and learned that sentences are comprised of syntactic slots, and that when creating a sentence you shouldn't overload more than one slot with information. There were a lot of things I hadn't learned, and still haven't.




There are a few gems in the old notebook drawer.


Much to the annoyance of their spouses, most writers never throw anything away. We hoard everything graced by our words—pocket notebooks, hotel stationery, cocktail napkins and business cards. I suppose the thinking here is that one day we'll remember such-and-such a line and want to use it in a new piece.


I've had this experience a couple of times, but the problem was, when I when to my "archives" and read the piece of description, dialogue or journal entry, the moment the piece was removed from its current context, it didn't have the same meaning. Like the famous iceman found in the Alps, my notebook entires are moments frozen in time that require some forensic reconstruction to understand their larger meaning. The Zeitgeist is lost, and as time goes on, the fire that compelled me to jot them down fades away.


But as the title of this entry suggests, buried within those million words are a few diamonds. I plan on dipping into my notebook drawer once in a while to share some of these snippets with you. Think of it this way: if a writer's creations are his children, these are my lovable and kind-hearted, but clueless, kids whom I want to have every opportunity. They may never go anywhere in life, but I still want them to have their 15 minutes. So, here goes:



Writing Advice
I open a tiny CVS pocket notebook and discover some story principles I paraphrased from somewhere. I have no idea what book these came from, but they're good and here they are:

  • Start with a change, a lack of harmony with the environment—a threat to the central character's self-concept.
  • As a result of the change, the character will create a goal—a story goal.
  • Get the change shown as swiftly as possible and show the character beginning to react with predictable unease—or worse.
  • Most "setup" stuff are author concerns. The reader just wants the story to start.
  • You have 25 words to engage a jaded editor's interest.
  • Arouse curiosity.
  • Grab the reader and give a hint of what to expect.
  • Some editors claim they can be sure if a book is going to be well-written and exciting enough to publish by reading just the first sentence or paragraph.



Quotes
In an interview once, David Mamet, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright and one of my idols, was asked if he ever used the conversations of regular people as the basis for dialogue. He replied, "Have you ever listened to subway talk? Subway talk is boring. I'd like to think I can come up with better dialogue than the crap people say on the subway."


I agree with Mamet that most overheard conversations aren't good enough to be used as dialogue in a story or play. (At least not without a lot of work.) However, sometimes people can surprise you, saying things that are incredibly apt or funny. Here's my favorite eavesdropped line from the Overheard in NYC website.


Dipping into my own collection of snatched things that people have said, here are a few of the best:



[Guy in his 30s talking to a male friend about women]

"They're gonna see what they want to see. You can come home with fucking flowers every day and it won't make a bit of difference."


[Elderly man on train asking other passengers the same question at every stop]

"Is this Scarsdale?"


[On line at Boston Market; one fat man interrupts another]

"Wait, is there meatloaf in this story?"


[No idea where I heard this]

"You know...you two are standing just far enough apart to form an ellipse."


[In a toy store; one man in his 50s to another]

"Toys these days? I've never seen such wimpy shit. Political correctness, I'm telling you. Now, back when I was Lou's age, know what I had? I had a Big Bang Cannon. And you know what the slogan said? You know, that italicized type? Yeah, it said, 'Big noise for boys!'. Toymakers back then, they didn't give a shit if you lost an arm."


[Some young lady—maybe one of my gal-pals in college— wrote the following in my notebook]

"I cleaned my room! I found my checkbook! I fucked my professor!"



Continue reading "Gems from the Notebook Drawer — Vol. 1" »

February 06, 2008

The Big Al Experiment: UPDATE

A little over a week ago, I broke the Prime Directive of writers—NOT to have relatives read and critique your writing—by having my father, "Big Al" read my latest PI novel. In case you missed the first installment of this story, you can read it here.


Well, I promised you an update, and here it is.




Al, in complete shock after reading my latest novel.


For dramatic purposes, it would be more interesting to be able to report that Al had ripped the book to shreds or fawned over every word, but the truth is he did an excellent job as a reader. Not only did he catch missing articles and verbs (victims of the latest round of edits), he also was very clear about places in the book where he got confused.


I always believed my father would have been a great detective. In 25 years as a school principal, he became very good at piecing together "crimes" perpetrated by students; he is a master at seeing the result and reasoning back to the causes. I don't have this ability. I can weave ideas together, spin a yarn, but I can't figure these things out logically to save my life.


Al especially helped me regarding beefing up certain suspects' motives. He didn't buy into a couple of the suspects' reasons for potentially committing the crime, and in saying so, he will be helping me to fix it.


Overall, I'm very pleased with the Big Al Experiment. Contrary to what you might think, reading and going over the novel somehow brought us closer. I will definitely employ Al again as a reader. Even though his lefty handwriting is for shit.


Looks like I'm going to be crossing the street a lot to decipher his comments. While I'm over there, I'll test my blood pressure.


February 05, 2008

When I Was Hooked on the H

I'm finally prepared to admit it. One year ago, I was hooked on the H.


Not a day went by that I didn't need my fix of this special brand of H—the LH.


I had to have it. I set up my life to get three doses a day: two in the morning, one at supper. 'Cause one thing I learned was, you can never get enough LH.


In case you're wondering what the hell LH is, it's Little House on the Prairie. Now don't laugh. That show had me hooked, I tell you. It started back when I was a kid in the late 70s and early 80s. Unbeknownst to anyone except my sisters, I watched reruns of LH between episodes of CHiPs and Magnum, P.I., and I never missed a show.




Charles and Caroline Ingalls. Or, just Pa & Ma to me, thank you.


All last winter, Alexas was unemployed, which honestly was a lot of fun. Every morning we'd rise at eight o'clock, or before dawn if there had been a storm during the night, and go out and shovel. (For Alexas, a California gal, shoveling snow was a novelty, and one I was glad to share with her.) Then we'd have breakfast— johnnycakes with maple syrup—and watch LH.


I'm something of a lay expert on LH, and I'll admit, I did my fair share of showing off to Alexas. At the outset of each episode, I would recite the plot—often within one minute. Mind you, I hadn't seen this show at all for 20-plus years.


Continue reading "When I Was Hooked on the H" »

February 04, 2008

My Shower Notebook

Like a lot of writers I get my best ideas in the shower, but for years I refused to acknowledge this fact. When I sniffed my mint shampoo and got an idea for an Irish woman assassin that specializes in poisoning through the epidermis, I told myself, "You can wait to write it down. You'll remember."


Guess what? Didn't remember.


And that's where my shower notebook comes in.


Now, I'll admit that many of my shower ideas suck, but as Creativity Guru Michael Michalko teaches in one of his books on the subject, when it comes to ideas, quantity begets quality. So, in the case of my shower notebook, when an idea comes to me, I don't judge it; I simply stick my arm out and write it in my little yellow vinyl notebook. It's called a WetLog™, and it's a lot more pleasant than it sounds.




The WetLog™ notebook—perfect for outside the shower.


Into my shower notebook I have put dozens of ideas, most of which will probably never come to fruition because I lack the skills, experience or both. (So, if you like an idea and can do something with it, by all means steal it.)


  • A science-fiction story about H3 extraction on the moon, wherein nano-machines enter the moon rock and suck out the H3 we need for fusion on Earth, and then because the humans start treating the little mechanical miracle-workers like shit, the nano-creatures turn on them.
  • An idea for an "editing engine" software program for writers.
  • An idea for a nanotechnology shaver, whereby hundreds of microscopic "Roombas" shave a man's face while he sleeps, effectively gnawing down the hairs like micro beavers to tiny trees, chipping them up and storing them in their bellies until they return to "base"—a canister on a chain around the man's neck. Hopefully these nano-guys won't revolt.
  • An idea for a new GEICO commercial. A while back, my wife and I were watching TV and remarked to each other about how tired the gecko-caveman thing is. So, why not a commercial that starts with a TV showing one of the old ones, then it pans back to show a couple on the couch. He says, "You know, that ad campaign's getting pretty tired." And she says, "Yeah, you'd think they'd realize how media-savvy people are these days and that they're saturated with this crap." Then CUT TO: "GEICO, fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent on car insurance..."
  • Characters' names. I've come up with a lot of character names in the shower over the years, and NO, I've never stooped to calling any of them Ammonium Laureth Sulfate, although I have used Laurel in a story, and YES, I got it from the shampoo bottle.
  • Dialogue. Most of the time I get the dialogue while writing or during my daily walk. However, now and then I find myself mulling over a line in the shower, refining it as I scrub, trying out different phrasings, comma placements and such.


Well, there you have it—the wonders of my shower notebook. Writer or not, I believe every creative person should have one. I don't know what it is about water that seems to stimulate most of us, but whenever I'm going to be around it, I make sure I have a notebook handy.


February 03, 2008

Love Makes Me Write, Not Self-Discipline

I never get sick. I mean never. The last time I was sick was three years ago with a cold, and just before that, a herniated disc. Which is why I don't know what to do with myself today because I'm sick.


But even though I was sick, I wrote today. You can count on it—on days that I don't write something for this or my other blog, NotWriting.com, I have written something, whether it be pages in a new novel, a scene in a screenplay, words for a business writing assignment, an entry in my private journal, you name it. The fact is, I write every day. Every day.


Yesterday, because I was confined to bed and didn't have the patience for writing in html on the blog, I worked in pencil on the synopsis of my new novel. That's the 1-page single-spaced document that will accompany my book to editors and film production companies. I dread writing the synopsis because a part of me feels that synopsis-writing has nothing to do with novel-writing, and that if a reader wants to know how it ends, I want to tell him, "Read the book."


But I did it. I wrote, just as I write every day, and I didn't do it out of a sense of duty or self-discipline. I did it because I truly love to write.




A Royal DeLuxe by a pool. That's it—no grand
metaphor, nothing. Just liked the picture.


My wife thinks I'm freakishly self-disciplined, and to the outside observer, I can see why she would think this. Every day, around 5am if I'm deep into a project, I shuffle across the hall to my office and get started. But I don't do it out of a sense of self-discipline. In fact, I think self-discipline is a lousy motivator over the long-term. Self-discipline may get you to sit up in bed, but only love will motivate you to leave the warmth of that bed, get dressed and embark on the loneliest enterprise there is—writing.


Many years ago, I had a revelation in which I finally understood the oft-quoted line by writers and other artists: "Process, not product." You have to enjoy the process of the craft you're engaged in and do it for its own sake, not for the final product or its perceived rewards.


Since then, if I'm ever feeling down or lacking motivation, instead of trying to discipline myself to write, I make a list of what I love about it, and always topping the list is my love of what I call "the line."


"The line" is that one sentence, that one piece of description, that one snatch of dialogue that comes out of nowhere and surprises you. You, the writer, have no idea where it came from; you know it's good, that's all. And ultimately, I think it's that love of the line that keeps writers writing. You simply have to love language, and if you don't, nothing short of self-flagellation would make you do this.




Hemingway's posthumous memoir of his early years in Paris.


Each year, I'll reread a few books where the gorgeous prose inspires me: Hemingway's A Moveable Feast, Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby, T.C. Boyle's East is East, Nabokov's Lolita, and Flaubert's Madame Bovary (or Tolstoy's Anna Karenina—depending on whether I want to read about the infidelities of a French or Russian woman). And more than the characters or plot, what you're reading for is the love. To witness great writers' love for the art and how they expressed it.


I didn't feel well today, but I wrote. And I wrote because I love writing.

January 31, 2008

Squelching Editing Myself

There are many drawbacks to being bipolar, but probably the most insidious is that when I'm on the cusp of, or in the midst of, a new manic cycle, I can become extremely irritable.


Petulant. Combustible.


When this happens, anything can set me off, and I have to exercise every fiber of self-restraint in me to keep from tearing people's throats out. I don't mean for this to happen, I honestly don't. I'll lash out at people and fifteen minutes later, like a summer thundershower, it passes and I don't know what I was so upset about. Like today with parking my car.




No Parking, biotch!


Since I moved back to my high school town of Millbrook, NY a year ago, I've been parking across the street in an empty spot behind my parents' building. It was convenient, and in exchange Alexas and I shoveled out the parking area that we shared with my parents and their elderly neighbors. A nice little arrangement.


Today when I returned home from the errands that a working writer/house husband does (speed grocery shopping, banking and office supply purchasing), I went to park my car and discovered another one in it. We've all had this experience. I hate fighting with people over knucklehead things like this, but I chose to confront the wrongdoers. I found out the vehicle belonged to a woman who works in a day salon across the street and went to their office and politely asked that the car be moved.


Continue reading "Squelching Editing Myself" »

January 29, 2008

Lines I Can't Wait to Use
(but won't get the chance)

Like a lot of writers, I'm a cinemaphile. I love everything about a good film—the characters, plot, setting, direction and pacing—but what I especially appreciate is the dialogue. I live for the great line.


I always know when I'm enchanted with a line because I'll quote it to myself or Alexas for days, sometimes weeks, afterwards. We all have our favorite lines, but not many of us have a list of them that we can't wait to use. I'm one of these freaks.


Trouble is, in order for these choice lines to work, everything must line up perfectly. The situations are so specific, and the conditions so rare, that the opportunity to use the line will probably never come. Still, the readiness is all...


Below are the lines I can't wait to use, along with the situation in the film and THE BAD NEWS—the reasons I'll probably never get to use the line in a real-life situation.




THE MOVIE: Chinatown

THE LINE: "Forget it, Jake—it's Chinatown."

THE SITUATION: In the film, Jake has just seen his lover, Mrs. Mulwray, shot and killed in Chinatown. The cops tell Jake to get lost, and his partner, attempting to drag him away, delivers the line.

THE BAD NEWS: The problem is there are too many variables. First, I'd need to be in a Chinatown someplace (New York is most realistic because it's closest to me, although San Francisco isn't unrealistic because my in-laws live there). Next, I'd have to be in Chinatown when something bad went down AND a good friend of mine or business partner is involved in it. Then, in order for the line to be effective, my friend's/business partner's name ideally would have to rhyme with Jake (not many names fit this criterion) or at the very least have a hard consonant at the end: "Forget it, Jack—it's Chinatown." Nope, never gonna happen.






THE MOVIE: Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid

THE LINE: "Think you used enough dynamite there, Butch?"

THE SITUATION: In the film, Sundance chides partner Butch Cassidy for using so much dynamite to blow open a train safe that it ends up blowing up the entire boxcar.

THE BAD NEWS: First of all, while I do have a friend who knows how to use dynamite, I don't see myself tagging along anytime soon if he was using it to blow open something of value. And even if I did accompany him on such an adventure, because he knows what he's doing, I doubt he would use enough of it such that the item in question is completely blown to hell, thus making the line ironic. Finally, my friend is not named Butch. I don't know a Butch and am not likely to know one in the future, so this line, too, will never happen.






Continue reading "Lines I Can't Wait to Use
(but won't get the chance)" »

January 28, 2008

Why Do I Have a Thing for Alices?

I'm not sure why, but I do. I have a thing for Alices.


A little self-psychoanalysis here. I think my interest in Alices started as a child, when I first read Alice in Wonderland. I remember being a boy and admiring this cool girl and her amazing adventures and all of the great lines she had.


Years later, as an undergraduate philosophy major, in a course on logical fallacies, we read Lewis Carroll's story again, and I was even more amazed by the playful, brilliant mind of Alice. Here are just a few of her better lines:


"Curiouser and curiouser!"


"It was much pleasanter at home, when one wasn't always growing larger and smaller, and being ordered about by mice and rabbits."


"It would be so nice if something made sense for a change."


"If I had a world of my own, everything would be nonsense. Nothing would be what it is, because everything would be what it isn't. And contrary wise, what is, it wouldn't be. And what it wouldn't be, it would. You see?"


Then at some point as a child I saw the movie, and I remember being spellbound by Alice's hair and eyes. I'm quite sure that these features of hers, beyond her clever brain, are why she has been so popular among little girls for generations.




Women everywhere have forever wondered, "What
product is this bitch using to get a sheen like that?"




Boy or girl, how could you not fall in love with Alice?


Okay, so now it's back to college for the next Alice. Two Alices, actually.


While going to school in Boston, besides my share of girlfriends, I had three gal-pals. The great thing about gal-pals when you're a heterosexual guy is that your respect for them and your enjoyment of their company outweighs your desire to sleep with them. Billy Crystal's character in When Harry Met Sally is right when he says, "You pretty much want to nail them, too," but again, you quell this desire in the interest of friendship.


Even though the first two aren't Alices, I'd like to mention them. Number one was a woman named Kate, a pallid, goth-ish English major with a wonderfully wry sense of humor. And Margie was the second—a Southern belle (Georgia, land of Scarlett O'Hara) and fellow philosophy major. Since I was a multi-generational New Englander, we clashed beautifully. Margie and I loved to argue; we'd go to movies together and afterwards argue about the film, go to the MFA together and argue about the paintings, go for coffee at the ERC and argue about that, too. Last I heard, she's now a successful lawyer in Phoenix. You go, girl!


And then there was Alice, who was something of a bad influence.




Daisy Buchanan's on Newbury St. in Boston: Where
Alice and I tore it up many an afternoon.


Alice loved alcohol as much as I did, and senior year she frequently talked me into cutting class so we could go drinking. We drank Bud at Fenway, G&Ts at Daisy Buchanan's on Newbury Street, Murphy's Irish Red at Tommy Doyle's in Cambridge, Bushmills Irish Whiskey at my apartment while listening to The Doors, and, three or four times (I forget—I was drunk), Stoli shots at The Foxy Lady, a strip club in Providence, RI. (Alice was either bisexual or an undeclared lesbian. Characteristically coy, she would never say.)


To this day, I don't remember how we got to Providence and back; I think Alice drove, and probably while drunk at that. I ended up using Alice as the prototype for the femme fatale in my novel A REAL PIECE OF WORK. I considered briefly naming her Alice, as my homage to the original hell-raiser, but I went with Shay Connolly instead.


Another Alice that stirred my imagination in college appeared in the 35th Anniversary Edition of Playboy. Her name is Alice Denham, and she was the July 1956 Playmate.


Once again, however, it was more than her looks that interested me. Yes, she was a gorgeous redhead, and yes she had a figure that could make a blind man weep. But she was also a talented writer and the only woman, says Publishers Weekly, "whose fiction and breasts have appeared in the same issue."


Thank God we can't say the same of Norman Mailer.




Alice Denham, working on a story in her bare feet. HOT!




Alice, looking over her work. Two major turn-ons
for me: a hot woman in a pickup truck, and
a hot literary woman at a typewriter.


Alice Denham wrote other work, too, including a widely praised novel, My Darling from the Lions. She wrote for television for years, and recently she came out with a "kiss-and-tell" memoir entitled Sleeping with Bad Boys, in which she dishes the dirt on all of the literary and film stars of the fifties.


I really shouldn't be speaking of her in the past tense because, to my knowledge, she still writes and does readings in New York City from time to time. Alice, if you're out there and reading this, I'd love to meet you—maybe at a reading of my own in the future.


The final Alice for whom I've had a thing is the inimitable Alice Roosevelt Longworth, the unruly daughter of Theodore Roosevelt. Ever since I read this biography on Alice, I've had something of a crush on her.


Alice Roosevelt, my love from another lifetime

Alice Roosevelt, TR's daughter, and
my love from another lifetime.


Alice Roosevelt with the pocket-dog

Alice Roosevelt was the original Paris Hilton, but
with an IQ 100 points higher and not at all slutty.


The woman was brilliant, witty, beautiful and irreverent. They named a color for her—Alice blue (similar to the color of postal uniforms). When her father forbade her from smoking cigarettes under the roof of the White House, she said, "Fine," and went up on the roof to smoke.


When TR was leaving office in 1909, she made a voodoo doll of Taft and buried it on the White House lawn. And while on a Far East good will delegation for her father, she acquired so much free loot from heads of state that one member of the party wrote a satirical poem called, "Alice in Plunderland".


And with that, my story of Alices has come full-circle. Why do I have a thing for Alices? I'm still not sure, but I enjoyed sharing this with you.


Here's to Alices everywhere.

January 27, 2008

The Big Al Experiment

A cardinal rule among writers is that you NEVER let family members critique drafts of your work. Invariably they will either praise it beyond its worth or shred it (and you) to ribbons.


My father, Al Orcutt (a.k.a. "Big Al" and "Broken-Down Old Dad"), is a retired school principal and avid reader. Although most of his reading is in American history and contemporary politics, he does enjoy the occasional novel and is a rabid fan of one of my favorite writers, John Irving. Until recently, Al had a retiree dream job—"working" in the Millbrook paint store. Since foot traffic has never been overwhelming in the village, Al got a lot of reading done.




Dad posing at the paint store. I was going for the look of those
antique photographs, in which the proprietor is expressionless.


But Al got bored with it, and the woman he was working for, although a savvy businesswoman, has a reputation for annoying her employees over time. So, for the first time in his life, Al actually QUIT a job.


The trouble is, now Al doesn't have a lot to do during the day. If I drop by (we live in the same town, across the street from each other—purely coincidental), Al is usually ranting at CNN or MSNBC about some new "damn bullshiit thing that idiot Bush is doing." I'll sit with Al for half an hour or so, during which time each of us will test our blood pressure twice, then go home shaking my head. What's becoming of my poor old broken-down old dad?


So...I've decided to break the Prime Directive and give Al a copy of my latest novel to read and critique. He needs a project, and although I've had several readers, I need a reader of his type, somebody who will read it purely for the story and who will tell me if it bores him at any point.


Al's verdict on the book will likely be one of two exclamations (spoken with a thick Downeast Maine accent):


"Jeezus Christ, Chris—how do you do it? Jeezus, if I tried to come up with a story longer than a page, my goddamn eyeballs would explode."

OR
"Jeezus Christ, Chris—it was good, but so many characters. I mean, Jeezus, how many of the fuckers do you need?"


I printed out a copy last night and will hand-deliver it to him this morning. While I'm over there, I'll test my blood pressure. I'll probably need it.


I'll report back to you in a couple of weeks, when I'm making this little project due.

January 22, 2008

In-Between Syndrome

Having trouble sleeping? Disenchanted with life, your writing, your sneakers? Are you between writing projects, suffering from a peculiar brand of postpartum depression that only writers of long works understand?


If so, you may suffer from In-Between Syndrome. Ask your doctor if alcohol, bipolar meds, or a gun may be right for you.


The other day I finished the fifth, and what I hope will be the last, draft of my newest novel and sent it off to my agent for her comments. Every time I finish a book, I find myself moping around for the next two weeks, saying things to my wife like, "I feel lost," or "What do I do now?"


Invariably, Alexas makes the mistake of trying to be rational with me. "You're always happiest when you're writing," she chirps. "Why not start a new project?"


Thanks for the tip, bitch.


The upside to In-Between Syndrome is that I have time to do some entries on my blogs (like this one) and update my websites in general. The downside is that I begin to wonder if shooting myself or being mauled by wild dogs would be so bad.


Regardless, I'm back for a while. At least until I start writing again.

September 28, 2007

Preparing for Success

On a snowy day in January, I wandered into a Borders bookstore and did something I always do when I'm seeking answers—I let synchronicity guide me to the right book. I found it, or rather it found me, and its message was exactly what I needed to hear at that time.


The book is Do Less, Achieve More by Chin-Ning Chu, and since then I've read it five or six times (it's a fast read). Her message is that if you fight Life, constantly pushing and pressing for the things you want, you'll have a much harder time achieving success than if you let go (surrender to forces greater than you) and allow your destiny to unfold naturally.


For those of you acquainted with works of Eastern philosophy like the Tao Te Ching, this idea of "going with the flow" is nothing new. However, Chu's book has a number of unique ideas and anecdotes, and one of my favorites involves one of the few celebrities I would love to meet: Clint Eastwood.





Clint Eastwood, with a beard

A photo of Clint Eastwood, taken by Lord Snowdon in the 80s.




In her book, Chu describes the idea of "preparing for success", and the great Clint Eastwood figures prominently in the anecdote. Rather than paraphrasing, I'm simply going to give you the entire page where she discusses this concept. Here it is:


Before the Angel of Success arrives in your life, you should devote yourself to preparing your welcome for her. Polish your craft and strengthen your body to be fit so that you can do your job and enjoy success when it comes. Sharpen your mind and spirit so they are ready to face the challenges that accompany a visitation from the Angel of Success.

If you are not ready when the angel knocks, she will flee. And who knows when she will make it back around to your door again? One night in the 1960s, Clint Eastwood and Burt Reynolds were dining together. Clint has already become a famous movie star, but Burt was still struggling, trying to get bit parts. Burt asked Clint what he had done before he got his big break. Clint answered that he had simply "prepared myself for success."

Those unadorned words, preparing for success, were the advice that was worth ten thousand ounces of gold to Burt Reynolds. He heard the words, understood the profound principle that they held, and went on to stardom.

Since I read that, over six months ago, I've been working diligently behind the scenes to prepare myself for success. I've beefed up this website. I've taken up golf. I've changed my diet and lost almost 20 pounds. I've started lifting weights again. I've bought myself a few tailored suits, including this fabulous Hickey Freeman number. I've organized my writing and my office (well, Alexas did). I've gotten my computers and typewriters in good working order. I've gotten an agent, who is getting my book read. I've been building a fan base. I've had a professional take author photos of me. And I've said yes to lucrative writing assignments, even though they aren't directly relevant to my ideal career path as a novelist and screenwriter.



"I don't believe in pessimism. If something doesn't come up the way you want, forge ahead. If you think it's going to rain, it will."
—Clint Eastwood





The one thing I haven't done much of over the past six months is the very thing I should be doing with every breath in my body and that's writing. Blog entries and journaling and emails and corporate writing notwithstanding, I've done next to nothing in the creative arena. Up to now, that is.


Inspiration has struck, and I'm prepared for success, so now I have no excuse for not writing.


Okay world, it's go time.

September 27, 2007

Readjusting

(No, not that kind of readjusting. Get your mind out of the gutter.)


After three months of hectic corporate work, capped off by an intense 2-week junket, I've been having a tough time adjusting to my regular life. Every day, the little voice in me asks, "Now what?"


It's understandable. I mean, the world I just returned from was surreal—almost too glam for this simple New England kid who loves his wife and cat and typewriter and Red Sox. A guy who prefers haddock chowder over caviar, and who plays golf with his 80-year-old neighbors on Mondays and Wednesdays (the old coots can still kick my ass).


It was a world of swanky resorts with sinfully large pools and flirty MILFs in hot tubs, powerful executives who deferred to my writing expertise, charming actors portraying characters I created, staggering light and sound systems, marble lobbies with exotic birds roosting in indoor palm trees, expensive suits with perfect drape, luscious buffets at every meal (at least in Scottsdale), whisking glass elevators, first-class upgrades, FedExed dirty clothes (profligate, I know), and big paychecks.


In other words, a world difficult to leave behind.


So now I'm back in the—literally—sleepy, one-traffic-light Village of Millbrook, where the most exciting (and saddest) thing to happen since I returned is that my neighbor's dog, which used to howl along with the noontime fire alarm, was put to sleep yesterday. Alexas and I bought a card for the owners and baked them brownies. Says Alexas, "Chocolate fixes everything." You know what? She's right.


My office, which, due to my wife's organizational skills, is a model of efficiency for creative pursuits, has sat in suspended animation since I left. The computers, the cubbies, the neatly arranged shelves of supplies—they've all waited patiently for my return and mock me every time I go in there. I know it's time for me to start a new writing project, but I can't seem to make the leap. I have folders for at least eight book or screenplay ideas, and I have the final draft of Welcome to Ricochet to complete, yet for some reason I can't get inspired.





Screenshot from WriteRoom

I wrote this entry using a new distraction-free writing tool: WriteRoom.




Louis La'Amour, the prolific writer of westerns, once remarked that the only way to get inspired is to start writing. "You have to turn the faucet on," he said. Alexas uses this quote on me anytime I moan about writing and my perceived sense of futility surrounding it. (Note to other writers: Don't tell your spouses any of these quotes because they'll always use them against you later on.)


Here's what I have to say about that: "Hey, Louis...turn this faucet on."


I know what I have to do. I have to channel my feelings about the glitzy experiences during the junket into a new project. I need to start writing again, plain and simple.


The thing is, there's a part of me that's reluctant to invest so much time and energy in a new project when the fate of the ones I already have in the marketplace is uncertain. At this very moment, A Real Piece of Work is on the desk of an editor in New York and a producer in Hollywood, and I have no idea what's going to become of my baby. Deep down, I feel like this: "Why should I write anything new when you guys [the publishing and film worlds] haven't accepted this book?"


Unfortunately, I've established a stalemate I know I can't win. My writing or not writing anything new will have no effect on their lives. The only person hurt by my not creating new things is me. (Well, Alexas, too, because she has to put up with my miserable ass. Okay, and anybody who has contact with me because I'm such a dissatisfied, petulant prick when I'm not writing.)


I know that the key is to just make the leap again. That leap of faith and self-assuredness that I've made hundreds of times before. The question is, how do I get there?


As I seek answers to this question, I play golf and scribble in this blog and do ab crunches and watch my Red Sox and read philosophy and debate buying a new iMac and try to forget the fact that, any day, my entire life could change in an instant.


Well, the noon fire alarm just went off. Time to have lunch, get the mail, stroll to the bookstore and the library, and head off on my afternoon walk.


Maybe today the answers will be out there, like a herd of deer stone-still in a field.


September 23, 2007

The Speechwriter - Part 3:  Success

This will be an anticlimactic entry, and for that I apologize.


For the final installment of "The Speechwriter" I planned on going into detail about the corporate event, but every time I sat down to write it, something just didn't feel right. For one thing, I felt self-indulgent talking about a lot of details that only meant something to me.


From a business standpoint, the event was an unmitigated success. My speeches were praised, and after a lackluster reception in the West, my little "play" was warmly received by the Eastern crowd in Orlando. My friend Mark and his business partner, Ben, were roundly praised by the executives, thus guaranteeing them a good year financially and future business from the company.


I learned a few things, too, like the following:

* A cream silk summer suit with a lavender shirt and tie is an ensemble that looks good on me.


* Even if you wear a linen suit with no metal in it, you still have to remove your jacket at airport security and run it through the X-ray machine.


* Phoenix is fricken hot and dry, even at night.


* Despite its stately palm trees and elegant lobby, the rooms at Gainey Ranch are in desperate need of remodeling.


* It takes an incredible amount of equipment, trucked in by tractor-trailers, to put on a corporate event.


* No matter how many times you take the pile of pillows off the hotel bed, tacitly saying, "I DON'T WANT THE GODDAMN PILLOWS ON MY BED," the housekeeper is going to put them back on there.


* Hyatt properties all play the same languid background music and pump the same scent into their hotels.


* If you wash your socks in the sink and hang them on your balcony in the desert air, they'll dry in about two hours.


I'm sorry, but the other, deeper things I learned are mine alone. Part of being a good writer is knowing when to keep things to yourself.


And this is one of those times.

September 18, 2007

The Speechwriter - Part 2:  Writing the Words

I recently returned from a strenuous, two-week corporate meeting, and the experience was so unusual, so heady for me—a guy who normally spends 80% of his time alone—that it's going to take at least three entries to fully communicate my feelings about it. I hope you keep tuning in for the next installment.

---

So, I was hired. Now all I had to do was write the stuff. And it would be easy money because nothing was riding on it. (Sarcasm.)


Let’s see, all I had to do was write a play that fictionalized a Fortune 100 company’s beloved founder, a man worshipped more ardently than Elvis; introductory and closing speeches for the company’s head of worldwide operations, in which I had to convincingly and naturally integrate terminology about a business I didn’t know first-hand; several video scripts for other high-level executives who, having met them, I wanted to make sound as good as possible; eight mini “transition” speeches for the main executive whose program it was; and ten minutes of banter for the executives and a guest speaker (who I hadn’t met and wouldn’t until the day of the show). All told, I had to write 2½ hours of material that would unveil the company’s annual operating plan and which, if poorly written or executed, could hurt the company’s stock and lead to my friend Mark losing a valuable client and possibly having to lay people off.


Like I said, easy money.


A nice low-pressure gig.


As I often do when starting a new job—especially in an area I haven’t worked in before—I briefly doubted myself. In this case, because we were talking about writing, my doubts only lasted about two minutes. In the past, I could be paralyzed by self-doubt for hours, sometimes days. But now that I’m in my late thirties and feel like I’m at the top of my game in every way, self-doubt doesn’t enter into the equation as much. One of the advantages of experience, I guess.





My computer

The Fusion Media guys wouldn't dare make fun of my computer now.




Now, if this were a movie, there would be a long montage here of me writing, but because that’s boring I’ll keep it short. I wrote first drafts using my Mont Blanc, while propped up in bed with a clipboard. For reference I flipped through PowerPoint decks that had been presented to the Board of Directors. (Hot.) Subsequent drafts were typed either on my eMac or the computer I’m using now: my iBook G4—deridingly referred to by Mark’s Fusion Media boys as “White Lightning”. There was considerable printing involved, crumpled up papers tossed at wastebaskets, gallons of Green Mountain coffee, a few dozen Nestle Crunch bars, short walks around my hometown of Millbrook, several lonely razor blades, and occasional 9-hole golf outings to clear my head. I came up with some good ideas out on the links, but I never billed for that time. Yeah, I know...generous.


The great thing was, throughout the summer, I was able to do the majority of this work from home. But alas, about once a week I had to commute down to the company’s headquarters in Westchester.


I realize that for most people a daily commute is commonplace, and if this describes your experience, I salute you. The last time I had to do it for more than a month was when I worked for Merrill Lynch, back in 2002. It sucked then, and I imagine it still does. For me, a guy comfortably ensconced in his little writing lair—with its gold-painted walls, Royal Quiet DeLuxe typewriter and Casino Royale movie poster—having to shave and dress up and travel 50 miles to an office where I have to quell my urge to use the word f--k is an ordeal. Brothers and sisters, if you do the daily grind like this, I tip my Red Sox cap to you.


The company’s home office is surprisingly pastoral. Nestled in some woods overlooking one of NYC’s reservoirs, the grounds are home to lots of deer, Canada geese and at least one flock of wild turkeys (no kidding; I wished I’d had my camera). The critters are safe because hunters don’t stand a chance at getting in there. There are cameras everywhere, including in the trees (which is why, despite desperately needing to urinate when I arrived there at seven o’clock one morning, I waited until I was inside). On the weekends giant, menacing-looking gates block the roads, allowing access only to those with IDs. You need a magnetic ID to get around inside the building as well, which is why it wouldn’t surprise me if, deep in the bowels of that citadel, there were an NSA think tank at work. But I digress.



For me, a guy comfortably ensconced in his little writing lair—with its gold-painted walls, Royal Quiet DeLuxe typewriter and Casino Royale movie poster—having to shave and dress up and travel 50 miles to an office where I have to quell my urge to use the word f--k is an ordeal.




After the revision meetings between me, Mark and his sharp, wry business partner, Ben Wild, the main reason for my going down there was rehearsals. Rehearsals of the play and the speeches. First, the play.


Let me preface my discussion of the play by saying that it was really a series of connected skits designed to dramatize the core principles of the new operating plan, cleverly titled (not by moi), “Operational Excellence”. Without going into detail, the core principles are Plan, Make, Warehouse and Sell/Deliver. The idea was for me to feature the company’s founder in fictional situations 100 years ago that showed him being confronted by, say, a problem in warehousing and how he solved it. Further, the idea was to use these “skits” as a mild form of propaganda to ameliorate the company’s restructuring and reorganization (translation: layoffs), hopefully giving the audience of middle managers some comic relief in the process. Oh, and I needed the skits to subtly convey the message that “Change is good.” Pshaw...child's play.


To this end, the director, Jim Steinmeyer, mentioned that he had been reading Charles Darwin the other night (no offense, Jim, but who does this?) and had come across a quote that he thought I could use. He closed his eyes and recited the following from memory: “It is not the strongest of the species that survives. Nor is it the most intelligent. It is the one that is most adaptable to change.” I wrote it down, knowing I would eventually weave into the tapestry of the story, although I had no idea how yet.


My initial concept was to feature the company’s founder in his small-town pharmacy with a pair of curmudgeons as foils. After a read-through, however, Jim and I agreed that three men wouldn’t play well. Also, for cost and logistical reasons, we decided to keep the cast to two, which would take some creativity on my part to generate dramatic conflicts. They would all have to come from offstage through phone calls, telegraph and the like.





Alice Roosevelt, my love from another lifetime

Alice Roosevelt, TR's daughter. She was a real piece of work.




I was actually glad about the limitations because they were steering me towards a more interesting alternative. I’d been thinking about the women of that period, and I’d always had a crush on Teddy Roosevelt’s daughter, Alice Lee Roosevelt Longworth. The woman was brilliant, witty, beautiful and irreverent. They named a color, Alice Blue (similar to the color of postal uniforms), for her. When her father, as President, forbade her from smoking cigarettes under the roof of the White House, she went up on the roof to smoke. Her exploits go on and on. The important point here is that I wanted to create a woman character—the founder’s visiting niece, Charlotte—who displayed these qualities of Alice Roosevelt. The resulting character was so clear, and so well portrayed by the actress, that seeing my creation come to life actually made me weep.


(Sidebar. You see, when you create fictional characters that appear in novels and short stories, you get used to experiencing them only in your head. This was the first time I'd ever witnessed characters of mine as living creatures, and I loved it.)


Now a word about the actors. When I met them, I was in the Fusion Media conference room, deep in thought about part of the play, when a man and woman in early 1900s attire burst into the room. The man wore an apron and suspenders; the woman a dress and a hat that I had described on the page as “impossible to miss”. Jim strolled in behind them and smiled.


“So, what do you think?”


For a few seconds, I was in shock. It was as though I’d been thinking so hard about the characters that they’d just come to life, like spontaneous combustion.


“Amazing,” I said.


“Are we like you imagined?” the actress asked.


I admired the tailoring on her bodice.


“Better.”


Seriously, they were. The actor playing the company’s founder was an accomplished stage actor named Danny Vaccaro who had been in a Broadway production of A Wonderful Life, as well as a few episodes of the New York actor’s staple gig—Law and Order. He was tall, courtly and had even grown a mustache for the part so he’d match the founder’s look. The actress, Kelly McCormick, had one of those radiant, versatile faces that you knew could play everything from a pauper to a queen. She had done a lot of musical theater including the lead in the national tour of Les Mis. At lunch that day, I found both of them charming—mostly because they laughed at all of my jokes. The entire Fusion Media team was enchanted by them as well, and for good reason; the two of them were positively magnetic.





The actors in my little corporate 'play'-Danny Vaccaro and Kelly McCormick

Danny Vaccaro and Kelly McCormick in my little corporate 'play'.




Privately, as the days of rehearsals and lunches went by, I found myself drawn closer and closer to Kelly. Since we met, the two of us had avoided direct eye contact. (She confided in me later that my gaze—normally pretty intense—was the first one she’d experienced where she had to look away. I told her that her eyes, which combined the vulnerability, intensity and wickedness of Scarlett O’Hara’s, had the same effect on me.) We managed to avoid locking eyes until the third day during lunch, and when it happened, a spark passed between us. Yes, a spark. And I don’t care if you think that’s a cliche; it was magical.


(Another sidebar. I love my wife, Alexas, completely and she knows this. I don’t flirt with women, and I’ve never strayed from her. Honestly, I was completely taken off guard by the chemistry between Kelly and me, but knowing that I hadn’t been looking for it, I make no apologies. I believe there’s a reason why Kelly and I met, and although I haven’t entirely figured it out, I know there is one.)


Further weakening my resolve was Kelly’s fawning over my work. To a writer, this is better than phone sex. However, she was so earnest and effusive that I thought she was just flattering me.


“I could never do what you do,” she said in the cafeteria one day. “It must be amazing to create something from nothing the way you do.”


I was about to say, “Yes, it is amazing, isn’t it? Godlike actually.” But I caught myself.


“But you create, too,” I said. “My words are like Frankenstein’s monster, and you and Danny give the monster life through your acting. That’s creating.”


She smiled at me. To break the tension, I nodded down at my lunch: carved roast beef with roasted potatoes and gravy. I spoke up in my best Robert Mitchum impersonation.


Beef, it’s what’s for dinner.”





Robert Mitchum in the 1962 version of Cape Fear

The way my brain works—Robert Mitchum's 'beef' commercials,
combined with the enchanting Kelly McCormick, make me think
of the original Cape Fear and its perfectly menacing title score.




Kelly gazed unflinchingly at me and drawled in the Southern accent of my character, Charlotte.


“But Mr. Orcutt, this is lunch.”


I cleared my throat.


Beef,” I said, “it’s what’s for lunch.”


“I don’t think that works,” she said.


I winked. “Yes you do."


She giggled, and in my mind I heard trouble. I thought of Robert Mitchum again, which got me thinking about Bernard Herrmann's brilliant title track from the original Cape Fear.

There's trouble on the horizon, mister. Watch yourself.


And so it went between us for the next fourteen days. A beautiful, vivacious woman instantly got me, and I got her, and it had only cost me three subsidized cafeteria lunches (hers, mine and Danny’s) to reach this point. During rehearsals, however, the two of us were all business, and when Jim, the director, had to step out for a moment, he handed me the reins. Big mistake.





Group shot of the director, actors and writer of our little play

Left to right: Jim Steinmeyer, director; Danny Vaccaro and Kelly McCormick,
the actors; and me, Chris Orcutt, the lonely writer.




As the substitute director—if only for half an hour—I felt compelled to offer my insights on the characters and how these trained actors should play them. Hey, I’d taken an undergraduate acting class, and hadn’t I created these characters? When Danny and Kelly finished a scene, to their credit they looked at me as though I was David Mamet (I hadn’t said anything play-related yet). So I offered the following wisdom:


“Danny, over the weekend I was watching Gone with the Wind, and I got an idea about Caleb.”


“Oh?” Danny said.


“Yeah,” I said. “You know who I think you should channel?”


“Mammy? ‘Oh, Mister Rhett, you sho’ luf Scarlett...’”


“Ha, ha. No, Rhett Butler. As you’re playing Caleb, think about Rhett’s social standing and wealth and refinement. Try to get all of those things into the character, but not the scoundrel part.”


Danny put a finger to his lips.


“I don’t know what that means,” he said.


“You know, Rhett Butler. ‘Frankly my dear, I don’t give a damn.’ Except not the mean stuff. Just the avuncular stuff.”


“Excuse me, avuncu-what?” Danny asked.


“I’m sorry,” I said, “avuncular. It means uncle-like. You’re Charlotte’s uncle.”


Mr. Orcutt,” Charlotte chimed in, “I do believe you’re causing a ruckus, sir. Y’all need to let us continue rehearsal.”


“I’m pretty sure Charlotte wouldn’t say ‘Y’all’, Kelly. Uh, Charlotte.”


She was staring at me with a faint smile on her lips when Jim returned.


“So, how are we doing?” he asked.


“I was giving them some notes,” I said, “but I don’t know what the hell I’m talking about. I’m going out for coffee.”


And thus my directorial career was dashed before it had begun. I’m meant to write the words, not interpret them, I guess. And it's a good thing, too, because Jim's expert direction and concept for the set transformed what would have simply been some clever words on a page into a real production.


More on the play and the other great people behind it in my next installment. Now, the speeches.


For weeks, Mark, Ben and I had been working in a vacuum, hoping for some feedback from the executive for whom I was writing the material, but every time he had a meeting scheduled with us, he would cancel at the last minute. In his defense, the guy did have other things to do like, oh, I don’t know, running the worldwide operations of a Fortune 100 company. As a result, when he had to cancel, Mark would say, “He’s on the jet to Turkey...to Russia...to Bolivia,” and we’d have to wait until next time.


Finally, a week before the event, at the same time as play rehearsals, he gave us a few days of rehearsal time. Let me say that the executive in question is a very amiable man, not at all the pretentious corporate stick-in-the-ass that you might expect. He grew up in Detroit, played Division I college football and has a wonderful, sonorous speaking voice. At the podium, he has terrific presence. However, when he did his first run-through, he read the speech like a cattle auctioneer. There were no pauses between sentences with one sentence running right into the next one like this but we couldn’t say anything too harsh because he’s the client so we were in this uncomfortable position of needing to be honest with the man but not being able to. Mark, Ben and I just looked at each other as he read, and I don’t know about those guys, but here’s what the cartoon bubble over my head looked like:



“WE’RE F-CKED.”

If Mark and I had been drinkers, we probably would have gone out for a shot (or eleven) afterwards. For all I know, Ben, who does enjoy an occasional cocktail, did just that.


In the days that followed, the executive improved exponentially. We put his material on the TelePrompTer, and he read from the Presidential glass (those glass thingys that stand at an angle in front of the President; yes, they might be bulletproof, but if so, that’s not their main purpose). Trouble was, he was still skipping punctuation. I considered putting a >>PAUSE<< in between every sentence, but decided that would be excessive. Not to mention it would extend his speaking time to about 17 hours.


Frankly, I was getting impatient and started to wonder if my speech was causing the problems. But then I went up to the podium myself and tried reading what the executive had to read. I quickly discovered that it’s not as easy as it looks because only two (or at most, three) words fit on one line:


The quick
brown fox
jumps over
the lazy dog.

Four score
and seven years
ago, our
fathers brought
forth on this
continent a
new nation, con-
ceived in Liberty,
and dedicated to
the proposi-
tion that all men
are created e-
qual.


You get the idea. Well, we worked our tails off that last week, me rewriting sections of the speech, Mark building slides, and Ben and Fusion Ops Director Jen Pesce creating a game show for the event while somehow keeping the other Fusion staff from committing mutiny.


And then time was up and we were heading to the event. One week at a resort in Scottsdale, AZ, then a second week at a resort in Orlando, FL. What had begun for me as an abstraction—a phone conversation in June—was now very much a reality. In a few days, an audience would see our work, and it would either be effective or it wouldn’t. It would be entertaining or it wouldn’t. Making matters worse were the questions tumbling around in my head before we left.


Would the executive land in Scottsdale and want a complete rewrite? Was he ready or would he freeze up in front of the crowd? Would he keep skipping periods? Had Alexas packed me enough boxer shorts? Would I get an aisle seat? Was there something between Kelly and me, or was I just imagining it? What would the food be like? And when they said, “breakfast buffet,” did that include sausage and bacon?


The answers to these and other important questions will be revealed in my next installment. Thank you for tuning in.


TO BE CONTINUED...



September 15, 2007

The Speechwriter, Part 1:  I Get the Call

I recently returned from a strenuous, two-week corporate meeting, and the experience was so unusual, so heady for me—a guy who normally spends 80% of his time alone—that it's going to take at least three entries to fully communicate my feelings about it. I hope you keep tuning in for the next installment.

---

About three months ago, my good friend and sometime business partner/employer, Mark Foster, gave me a call. It turns out I had just walked in the door from my "temp job"—as the handyman on a Millbrook estate. I did okay at the work, but by the time Mark called, I had begun to grouse about the state of my life. I was beginning to wonder whether I had spent enough time with my high school guidance counselor.





My muddy work boots

My muddy work boots. Soon to be traded for my square-toed Kenneth Coles.




Anyway, sweaty, breathless and smelling of Burt's Bees Lemon Herb Insect Repellent (mmm...), I answered the phone and we spoke for about an hour. Mark is a VERY busy guy, yet he spent 1/16 of his workday talking with me, so I knew it was important. It turned out that he was doing a mega-event for one of his Fortune 100 clients, and he needed a speech- and script-writer.


"So," he asked, "is this something you might be interested in?"


I glanced down at my coffee-stained toolbag and my mud-caked work boots. (I'd just bushwhacked through an overgrown garden/cemetery on the property that morning.)


Alexas was nearby, bouncing up and down with hands clasped—because she knows, like anybody who knows Mark, that the man has the Midas touch. Put another way, the guy is a tractor beam for success.


I glanced at Alexas and said to Mark, "Let me check my calendar...(two second pause)...Yup, I'm free. So, what do you need?"


He said that the client needed a speechwriter, as well as somebody who could write a play that would dovetail with the company's annual operating plan, dramatizing the principles they wanted to communicate. The client's illustrious founder would be the centerpiece of said play, but beyond that I would have carte blanche with the story, characters, etc.




My Montblanc pen
Gettin' serious: speechwriting demands the heavy artillery—my Mont Blanc.


While Mark's company regularly handles all aspects of major events for the client in question, this event was particularly important to his business because it represented an opportunity for him to branch into written content—a step beyond the fabulous multimedia and meeting planning services his company has always provided.


"I'm not asking anybody else," Mark said, "because there's no one else I would trust with this."


"All right," I said. "I'm in."


TO BE CONTINUED...

June 25, 2007

FREE Ebook on Getting an Agent

It only took me four books, seven years and hundreds of rejections to do it, but I've finally gotten a terrific agent.


Now that I've broken through to the other side, I'm going to share with you the killer query letter I wrote that got my PI/mystery novel, A REAL PIECE OF WORK, noticed and requested by literary agents.


I'm proud of my letter, mainly because once it started to work for me, I didn't screw with it too much. I'm also proud of it because it enticed some of the top agents in the business to request the complete manuscript (even though not all offered representation), including ones at Curtis Brown, Donald Maass and the mighty William Morris. In all, the letter had about a 15% success rate (where the agent requested the whole book), which is considerably higher than the average.


I attribute a good deal of the interest in my book to the intriguing nature of my topic—forged and looted WWII art—but I credit my query for its salesmanship. I'm bragging a little here, but I'm also confident that the things I've learned about this process will help other writers.


Having read dozens of books and articles about query letters over the years, and having received hundreds of rejections from previous queries, I've come up with a few guidelines that might work for you.


All I ask in return is that you join my fan club/contact list.


(C'mon, I'm giving you thoughtful, free information here; surely asking for an email address is fair.)


If you provide me with a legitimate email address, I will personally reply with a 17-page PDF chock-full of guidelines, tips, tricks and resources for getting an agent and writing a query letter that will get you noticed.


(In the "Message for Chris" section, just mention that you want the agent PDF.)


Many of my suggestions are new, and they're all up-to-date. In other words, they're based on the realities of trying to get an agent in the 21st century—not 1980, like some books describe.


I promise that the email address will only be added to my personal contact list, so I can get in touch with news of the novel's publication, upcoming readings, events, etc. I will NOT give out your email address to anyone, and I will only email you when something special is happening.


I hope to hear from you.


Sign up to receive the free PDF on How to Get an Agent and Query Letter Guidelines, Tips and Tricks!


December 31, 2006

God's Delays Are Not God's Denials (I Hope)

Well, another year has come and gone, and (unless one calls between now and midnight) I'm still without a literary agent.


Yes, I know there are far greater tragedies in the world, but I was really hoping this would be the year. In fact, I was drop-dead certain this was going to be the year.


I was wrong.


I'm saving the details of my quest for an agent for a future entry, however suffice it to say that I've been querying, submitting and getting rejected since April. Response to the novel and my writing in general has been consistently positive, but for one reason or another every agent who has read it has decided to "pass"—like it's a bowel obstruction. Who knows, maybe they're all constipated and that's the problem.


I once read that "God's delays are not God's denials." I can't remember where I saw that, but I like to believe it's true. I lik