Hey, anybody around here remember me?
Six weeks is a near-eternity in OS time, I know. While I’ve been busy ignoring my old friends, it looks like a few thousand new members have signed on and I'm wondering if I’ll ever get back into the swim again. Being away from this place (aside from an occasional quick read here and there) hasn’t been easy. I’ve spent the last six weeks writing on my own, and must confess that I’m finding the company rather monotonous.
So here’s the story behind my absence:
Back in early February, in a departure from my usual light fare, I posted a more serious piece about growing up with a manic depressive mother. The following day there was a message in my inbox, under the tantalizing subject heading of “publisher’s query.” It came from the executive editor of a large publishing house, who wanted to know if I was interested in developing my story into a memoir. You can pretty well guess what transpired after that: much shrieking and jumping up and down, followed by calls to friends and relatives (especially the ones who’ve been poking fun at my blogging habit) and from there I quickly segued into fantasies about shooting the breeze with Oprah and Terri Gross, though being a realist, I refrained from mentally casting all but a few key roles in the critically-acclaimed film adaptation.
Anyway, at the editor’s request, I emailed him my phone number and spent a couple of anxious days waiting for his call (it came while I was driving, which explains the near-collision...luckily for me, this particular pedestrian was more agile than most). Mr. Editor and I chatted a bit about the challenges of breaking into the already crowded memoir field, and then he suggested -- without offering any guarantees, of course -- that I come up a book proposal, consisting of an outline, introduction, and a first chapter, preferably within a month’s time. (My lips are sealed re his identity, but I thought you’d be interested in knowing about this. I have good reason to believe there are other folks in the publishing world who read things here as well.)
Those of you who follow my posts with any regularity are probably aware that I’m not a fast writer. Even when I’m cranking on all three burners, one post a week is generally about all I can manage. Like a number of my buddies who have resurrected old literary ambitions here on OS, over the years I’ve become quite adept at ignoring that nagging inner voice that’s been urging me to write, figuring I’d get around to my true calling “someday.” After all, it’s easier to imagine you might have a knack for something if you don’t actually sit down and try to do it. Until I started blogging here back in October, I hadn’t written a thing beyond email and to-do lists for more than a decade. For some time now, this avoidance strategy has worked quite well, allowing me to channel my creative energies into a couple of extensive bathroom remodels and several Rubbermaid bins full of half-finished knitting projects. I’ve also become quite the virtuoso with a rolling pin. But there’s nothing like crossing the half century mark to alert one to the finite nature of life’s possibilities.
All of this is merely a roundabout way of saying that the publisher’s request was, for me, a fairly tall order, though I gave it everything I had, as my resentful dogs and affection-starved husband will attest. In truth, I have never been much of an outliner, even back in my long ago college term paper days. I’m more of a plunge-in-first, figure-it-out-as-you-go-along type of gal, an approach that does not easily lend itself to organizing a meandering life history into book form, at least within a thirty day time frame. It is a sobering thing to come to grips with the fact that I’ve walked this earth for more than fifty years without developing a readily discernable narrative arc, the hero’s journey from conflict to resolution that moves every good story along. My life, so far as I can tell, contains something more akin to a narrative squiggle, and I won’t pretend I’m not depressed about this. It’s bad enough to fail my outline audition, but frankly this pales in comparison to discovering that my existence has about as much point to it as a Seinfeld episode, though I haven’t yet given up hope.
My book proposal had numerous other shortcomings as well, which I knew when I submitted it, though the editor was very gentle, perhaps fearing that I, like my mother, could easily be launched into a depressive psychosis. My writing is too condensed, for one thing; I don’t really know how to unfold a scene slowly. (Looking at the positive side, this may mean I have a bright future with Cliff’s Notes or Reader’s Digest.) What’s more, as alarming as their behavior has sometimes seemed to me, my relatives are actually fairly run-of-the-mill in terms of craziness. Tolstoy’s famous pronouncement that all happy families are alike while every unhappy family is different doesn’t really apply to the world of the memoir, it turns out. For the last week or so, I’ve been speed reading best selling accounts of life among the dysfunctional, hoping for some sort of osmotic effect, only to discover that I’m not the only person in the world with a mother who sometimes enjoys rooting around in dumpsters, or a brother who receives Homeland Security dispatches via the amalgam in his bicuspids. I’m beginning to think that normal families are the true exotics among us; maybe these are the people who should be baring their souls on Oprah, regaling the audience with tales of harmonious holiday gatherings, where people happily eat what’s in front of them without fear of poisoning, and of childhoods in households where the television only talked when it was actually turned on.
The editor has turned me over to a terrific young agent, who’s been quite encouraging, though I can’t figure out if he’s just being polite, given our vast age difference. He does share the opinion that my proposal is not yet ready for prime time, so I’m floundering around at the moment, trying to figure out where to go from here. Having just spent a week with my family back in the Detroit area, the prospect of immersing myself in their world for months on end is somewhat daunting psychologically. There’s a reason why my relations are in Michigan and I’m in California; I probably would have gone even further but for the large body of water to my immediate left. The agent has suggested I write a few detailed scenes and see where it takes me in terms of finding that elusive arc, so that’s what I’m going to start with. I've also signed up for a few workshops. Which means, for now at least, I’ll be around here on a part-time basis, maybe more, depending on how it all goes. So please bear with me if I miss some of your posts or if my comments are less than scintillating.
Meanwhile, if you find a similar message in your inbox, and you’re enjoying your life as a blogger, you may want to think long and hard before opening it.


Salon.com
Comments
I know you'll end up learning a lot during this process. My fingers are crossed for you.
I sent a query letter to an agent last year for a book idea, and they responded quickly with a request for a full proposal. I froze. I joined a workshop to focus, and am going full speed ahead on it now. Good luck!
And this sums up my own writing style perfectly: "I have never been much of an outliner, even back in my long ago college term paper days. I’m more of a plunge-in-first, figure-it-out-as-you-go-along type of gal."
I used to fudge my High School English assignments. I always wrote the outline last, so it would match what I'd actually written. Who in the hell thinks in outlines? I wish my mind were that organized.
You'll find it. And so what if there isn't an arc. The arc could be the way in which you found a way to cope living day to day after having so much thrown at you through the microwave signals beamed through your skull en route from television set to brother's bicuspids.
You can do this. You WILL do this.
Good luck.
That is just GREAT, Laurel!! Congrats!!!
This is opportunity. Give it your best, that's all you can do. Know we'll all be rooting for you!
Thumbed.
How wonderful and how terrible at the same time.
He would not have assigned you an agent if he did not think that you had a lot of promise.
The only way I can really write anything is to fall in love with it. Forget other's stories, fall in love with your own words.Best of luck and let us know how it is going. Briefly.
you done good~
Nice to see you back and I'm sure your story will have a happy (and hilarious) ending.
And speaking of dysfunction, have I got a family for you!!!!
I am amazed at our similarities -- my family remained in Michigan, and I went south to Florida -- where of course one runs into water, too.
Outline? Whatsa outline? Unless it's for some anally retentive project manager, an outline is better spelled wasteoftime.
Write, write I say, and when you have muddled your way into the good stuff, you'll find the the Arc of the Convenient. That is the holy grail necessary for marketers and second-rate salesmen to answer the Great Mystery of life -- what's your book about? I tell them it's about 350 pages, if I coulda made it shorter, I would have.
The very idea that someone's life conforms to a "pattern" is pure poppycock, as anyone from Joyce to Studs Terkel would tell them -- while viciously boxing their ears. If your life has a "pattern", it isn't worth writing about.
Okay, I'll quit now, because as you can see, I, too, cannot write swiftly -- although I have written a couple of homages called Gullible's Travails and A Modest Proposal.
cartouche, i've already asked laurel to do an interview, maybe with another friend of ours too, so back off, girl. :) see, laurel, you're a treasure. we're fighting over you. love love love
Whenever I give in and attempt to find an agent for my novels, I have to send a first chapter, a cover letter, a synopsis and sometimes an outline, and I am so overwhelmed that it takes me days to get around to it. Sometimes I'm completely done in by the "stamped, self-addressed envelope" request.
But on the bright side, this is SO EXCITING! I agree that if the editor is arranging for an agent then he/she must be pretty serious about your potential! You have the talent and the story, now it's just a matter of putting that into some kind of salable form. I'm sure you've already been directed to those Writer's Market books with How-To-Write-A-Book-Proposal articles. Just don't let yourself feel too pressured -- try to relax. Write it all crappy and messed up, get the info down, then go in and clean it up and make sense of it and hand it over to the agent.
Meanwhile (not to put any pressure on you) we'll we waiting to catch you on Oprah. (Taking bets on how many minutes it takes to make Oprah get all teary.)
Someone close to me is awaiting similar news next week. There must be a gazillion projects floating round right now. Good luck and please hang around meanwhile. We miss you.
I have to tell you, you are one of my absolute favorite writers, period. Whether it's fast or slow, on OS or on the top-selling shelf of my local bookstore -- I just hope you keep doing it, because I want to keep reading it!
Glad you're back!
It is always good to hear from you and the one line that I can think of, which is probably anachronistic, is "Are we having fun yet?" Sounds silly, I know, but one thing I hope that you do as you work your way both through this opportunity and this very nerve wracking time is whether there is actually any joy in the doing of this.
Likely there is but it is always well to remind ones self of that. And on the chance that you are not having fun, even after giving it all that you have and trying to have fun, then it helps to remember that there are many rainbows in our lives if we bother to look for them, and some do not need a pot of gold at the end to be beautiful.
We will be crossing our fingers, and sending out mystic waves of good vibrations your way.
Wonderful to get even a glimpse of you.
Monte
My advice, forget about the whole narrative arc thing. Think more inter-connected essays. You're hilarious. Go the David Sedaris way and just let your voice do the work. Natalie Goldberg put out a good book about memoir writing a few years ago called Old Friend from Far Away. She's got a lot of interesting memoir exercises. Just generate some good material and keep working on it.
And keep checking back when you can.
And I'm only just the littlest bit envious --- but you know I'm kidding---or not.
Good to have you back. And remember, I'm always available for "assigning" a post.
Sp proud of you, my friend.
And I'm only just the littlest bit envious --- but you know I'm kidding---or not.
Good to have you back. And remember, I'm always available for "assigning" a post.
Sp proud of you, my friend.
And I'm only just the littlest bit envious --- but you know I'm kidding---or not.
Good to have you back. And remember, I'm always available for "assigning" a post.
Sp proud of you, my friend.
Work hard. You have great skills. Not unlike driving a car, the more you do it the better you get until one day it becomes second nature.
Good luck...........uh, what was your name again?
You've got a ton of talent. This is just a learning curve. When it all comes together, and it will, be sure to message us when you're on Oprah promoting her new Book Club pick.
I know you can do this. You just need to remember that it is your style, your wit, and your perspective that will make your memoir special and sell it to an audience, not the narrative arc per se. I too am really glad to have you back. But this is a tremendous opportunity and OS is, among other things, an incredible time suck. As bad as your going away again is for us, it might just be best for you.
The good news is that the work you do on the proposal will help you when you're writing the book. You learn as you go. And getting an agent is a big step.
When the agent said the proposal was ready, it sold quickly -- for a very tiny advance. "Our School: The Inspiring Story of Two Teachers, One Big Idea and the Charter School That Beat the Odds" came out in late 2005; the paperback was 2007. As a way to make money, I recommend getting a job at MacDonald's. I could have been assistant manager by now.
And see, once upon a time you almost flounced (if I remember correctly). Keep writing, it will come together, I am sure.
I hope you can get this project to fly.
As far as getting this opportunity, I would agree with anyone who tells you that you should continue to look at it as a very positive thing and that with more hard work and a little more luck, you will see your name and picture on the dust jacket of a Borders near you.
Best of luck from one of the new guys.
And sure, there's the aspect of having to revisit the whole damn experience, which people often forget is NOT a walk in the park.
With that said, keep the wheels spinning. And do it in YOUR time. Find your pattern or rhythm within these constraints.
And I did the same thing as Verbal in HS; write the outline last.
Something I'm confused about is when you (and others here) suggest that the material you've actually blogged here (or are publishing here in the form of chapters, in the case of a few OSers) could be used for a book. I thought publishers didn't want stuff already out there online. Could you clear this up for me? I've been going round and round about it. Maybe this question is for Lea Lane and Denteig too. Are you proposing a book that includes material published here?
Thanks for the advice about just being myself. I think I got all nervous and self-conscious -- kiss of death. Will try pretending I'm blogging instead. OS is such a supportive environment.
I've been sending out my manuscript to agents and I know they aren't just being nice when they say nice things about your work. They are in the business of being truthful, honest about what they think will work or what won't.
Peace, Robin