
Eileen and Jerry Spinelli
Can you give an example of some ways you nurture your writing self – process, practice, routine? Donna Jo: When I finish a page, I get a Hershey’s kiss. When I finish a chapter, I get a beer. When I finish a whole first draft, my husband and I share a bottle of prosecco. Jerry: I love it when the muse pays me a visit. But that happens maybe once a decade. So it’s a job and I treat it as such. I mount the stairs to my office and begin writing each morning at ten. And often a funny thing happens. The fingers on the keys, the letters marching across the screen have a way of creating an energy, like jump-starting a car or flint-stoning a fire. Momentum carries me along. I find myself in places unseen from the vantage of inactivity, and, in the best moments, I find myself sneaking up on the muse. Eileen: I try to write most days. I read. A lot. I talk to writing friends. If I’m stuck and spinning my wheels…I do something else for a while: weed the garden…browse in a thrift shop…take a nap…reorganize the kitchen…play Scrabble…
Can you share a few thoughts on how new writers can build a successful writing practice? Donna Jo: Take yourself seriously. Make promises to yourself and keep them — just as you would if you made a promise to a colleague. Work hard. Jerry: Do you have time to read a few hundred pages? But in the end, really, ninety percent of it is this: WRITE. WRITE. WRITE. Eileen: Know yourself. Do you have best energy in the morning? Or evening? Do your thoughts flow better writing longhand…or on the computer? Talk with other writers. How do they make time for the writing work? Are you willing to give up an hour of TV most days? If there are too many distractions at home…can you get to a library or cafe for an hour?
How important (or not) is the concern about getting published, to the writing process? Does it inspire? Interfere? Donna Jo: The concern about getting published should be zero on the first drafts. On first drafts, just go wherever you need to go. Let it happen. Then, when you see what you have, you can ask yourself what you need to do to make this understandable not just to yourself, but to strangers as well. If it’s not understandable to strangers, it won’t get published. But if you’re writing only for yourself, you never have to ask that question. I hate the word “inspire” — I think there is no inspiration in writing, there is only hard work, faith, good spirit, flexibility — all the things you need to succeed at anything else. Jerry: Let’s stipulate at the start that self-publishing is off the table. So yes, you can take dead-aim at publication. You can study the market and try to tailor your work to fit. I tried that a long time ago and it didn’t go very well. For me–and I think for many others–the ticket was to identify what I wanted to write about and what I seemed to be good at and just go ahead and do it: write write write. The rest, I guess, is faith, faith that if your stuff is good enough sooner or later somebody will want to publish it. Generally speaking, I still think this is true. Eileen: For me (though not for everyone) being overly concerned about the market or getting published tends to interfere. I try to put that out of my mind until I have completed whatever it is I’m writing.


