Becoming A Fiction Writer
One girl, one dream … and a whole lot of procrastination
January 22, 2010 by amanda

Discovering that Shakespeare was more important than I thought

Recently I was listening to a series of radio broadcasts that Bill Bryson made a couple of years back, bundled together with the title Journeys in English – it’s fascinating stuff about the development of the English language, and interesting for me both as a writer and as an English teacher. (Yes, I recommend it!)

Anyhow, while any number of interesting points remained in my mind after listening to the programmes, one fact stuck out that I felt I should have known already. I kind of knew that Shakespeare had invented a few words, but somehow in my head these were more along Jabberwocky lines – interesting, but not very useful. Turns out I was wrong.

You may already know this, but just in case you don’t, Shakespeare was responsible for introducing a whole bunch of rather important words into the English language. From this list of words he invented, just a few that I both like and use regularly include:

  • suspicious
  • generous
  • frugal
  • premeditated
  • amazement

And ol’ William was responsible for a bunch of phrases too, including:

  • method in his madness
  • it’s Greek to me (by the way, it’s fun to ask speakers of other languages for the matching phrase)
  • break the ice
  • be all and end all

I confess to only tolerating Shakespeare in high school – I liked the storylines, but the language was really not that fun for me. Somewhere in my bookshelves is a complete works of Shakespeare, but I haven’t been back to look at it for many a year. Perhaps I should when I need some solid literary inspiration, or even just a few new words.

Any Shakespeare fans out there? Let me know which play I should read first when I finally pick that hefty book off my shelf.

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January 22, 2010 by amanda

Creative couples: Having a partner who understands your creative itch

I just read an interesting post at Christina Katz’s Prosperous Writer blog about creative couples – husband and wife/partner teams who are both working in a creative area. Christina mentions that her husband also works in a creative area (in theatre) and they’re able to provide each other with mutual support, which is pretty important.

Which made me reflect that I’m lucky, too. My husband actually works as an engineer (some might argue they make some creative building decisions, but he would definitely not say that it’s a particularly creative job) but he also trained at art school and contemplated life as a painter. He decided that the career prospects were too shaky and that life as an artist might rule out other normal aspects of life like having a family (and if I’d been around at the time, I would have debated that, but in some ways he’s probably quite right), and chose to keep painting as a hobby and work as an engineer.

However, even if he’s not a full-time artist, he totally gets the creative process and that’s a big help for me. He still paints semi-regularly, and when he does it tends to be in day-long bursts where I know there’s no point interrupting him – although in fact I never want to, because I’m always happy to see him at his easel. This means that if I’m working on finishing a novel or something, he’s also very understanding about the time it might take up for a while.

We also get to have a lot of interesting conversations about how creative people think. They tend to start off with something like, “This person at work said/did/thought this, how is that possible?” and when we break it down, it often turns out that as a non-creative person, their priorities and philosophies are just really different to ours. Having a creative purpose in life, which for both of us is more important than many other purposes, makes us different from the people who seem to be focused on making money or retiring early or whatever, and sharing this view certainly helps both our relationship and our creative endeavours.

If I was married to a “straight engineer” who didn’t have a creative outlet, I think my writing life would be a lot different. I can’t say for sure, but I’m guessing my writing would be looked at as “my little hobby” and I’d be really struggling to prove myself. As it is, my husband believes even more than me that I can be a successful published writer, and that belief certainly helps me move forwards. I guess a picked a good one!

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