Sep
5
Keeping a writer’s notebook
Filed Under On writing, Writing advice
I have a poet friend who was told me once that ideas are ours only for so long. If we don’t use them, our muse takes them to someone else. Then we forget about them until we read them in another writer’s words.
Fortunately, we don’t need to lose our ideas to the aether. We just need to write them down, and preserve their freshness until we are ready to dash them onto the page.
Any aspiring writer should keep an idea file. Most can use a small notebook kept on hand at all times. For those moments of random beauty, irony or curiosity, you need to be able to jot them down for later exploration.
Keeping a long record of good ideas, interesting sightings or sayings that were overhead not only gives you material for when you can’t seem to come up with anything, but it builds your understanding of the world around you. The more nuanced your view, the more layered and original you’re writing will be.
Here are notes that I find in my notebook:
- Premises: I have ideas that seem like they would make great short stories all the time. Whether or not they can, that’s debatable. Doesn’t matter though, they’re lost if they don’t get written down so anything that seems interesting goes in here.
- What ifs? Sometimes conversations can raise interesting questions that are worth exploring in prose. Those “What Ifs?” make a lot of great stories. You probably have these conversations all the time (what if Aliens invaded earth just for our Boston creme pie? What if we elected a president that was nine feet tall and mostly made of steel?) so why not get some writing fodder out of it.
- Observations: Funny/interesting/ironic things creep up on us whether we’re eating or sitting at home watching the animals chase things that don’t need to be chased. Mundane, everyday observations get life through exploration. Writing is about giving life to a point of view, so seeing something worth infusing with meaning is always good for the notebook.
- Strange speaking conventions:People have unique ways of speaking -rhythms and cadences that sound so particular they resonate in your ear and brain. When you notice this, it’s great to note them for when you are writing dialog for your characters. Creating a unique voice for them is hard, but borrowing it from a real person isn’t!
- Imagery: You’ll know it when you’ll see it, and it will be incredible. Those glimmers of images will help you through tough sines or lack of inspiration.
Even if these notes don’t amount to work in and of themselves, they might fit nicely into another piece I’ve been working on, so it helps to review the notebook pretty often. In fact, an interesting idea file can be the greatest cure for a case of writer’s block.
I like using Moleskine notebooks because they are the right size and they look the part. Using such a stylized and traditional writer’s notebook makes me look the part so it’s sort of validating of my choices.
Of course it doesn’t need to be that fancy or historically pertinent. Any easily-carted notebook will do.
And of course the pen. You can never forget the pen.
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3 Responses to “Keeping a writer’s notebook”
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Yep yep. The writers notebooks is one of the most important things he’d ever carry. I myself have five notebooks. One moleskine and four composition. Each are used for different things which add up to one essential point. Just writing. One full of all my radical beliefs, others full of poetry, even some with general ideas that come to head just so that I don’t lose the creative train of my imagination.
It’s always so fun to go back and look all everything months, even years after writing something. Seeing your old mistakes. Or things that you really enjoyed about your writing. They work perfectly with nostalgia.
That feeling of reading older notes is like having a dialog with a different you. I personally never feel like I’ve grown too much, but when I read old writings, the changes are hard to ignore.
I like having the multiple notebooks also; I think having a goal for each keeps me more focused on writing what I’m really setting out to.
Yes, you are right. As simple as it sounds this is the most important aspect of getting ideas for writing. We encounter so many different things through a day and tend to forget certain situations that are great for writing. I personally carry one around, so when i am having one of my inspiratinal days where my pen won’t stop i can write many quality articles or poems. Great article, i will be adding you to my blogroll.