Earlier this week the top headline (above the fold on the front page) in the Boston Globe read, “For majority of workers, vacation days go unused.”
I
laughed. What’s a vacation?
All
right, I’ll admit that I actually took a vacation this year—two weeks in
Italy. But I felt so guilty that I had
to write a book about it (Reunion with
Death, released in November).
I also spent two weeks in Ireland
recently—but that was work.
I love my work! I don't need—or want—a vacation, because it feels like my entire life is a vacation.
When
I started writing, I had just been fired from what I thought was the perfect
job. I was angry and hurt, so I said
something like “I’ll show them,” and I started writing. Once I started, I couldn’t stop. I had something to prove, and I knew I had
started late, so I was trying to catch up. In the end I spewed out roughly a million words before I slowed
down. Okay, maybe a lot of them were not
good words—the writing was sloppy, the plots were weak, and I kind of dwelt on
dark crimes. Yes, now I write cozies, so I must have gotten all that anger out
of my system. I also learned a lot about writing along the way.
And
I loved it. Once I’d purged that bile, I
wanted to keep going. I never went back to a day job, so I had something else
to prove: that I might be able to make a
living with writing. Took a while (close
to ten years), but it finally worked out.
Beginners, do not try this without an outside income source! Partner,
trust fund, lottery win—all will do just fine.
Nowadays
I have found that almost everything I do feeds into my writing. I can’t go to a store without watching other
people and wondering, what if they were planning a crime? What secrets do they
have? I can’t admire a pretty landscape without looking for places to hide a body,
or picturing a corpse washing ashore. Everything becomes fodder for some future
book (the ex-government administrative employee who is now raising alpacas on a farm in western Massachusetts is definitely going
to show up—I met her at a tag sale).
The
trip to Ireland was certainly work: I
talked to quite a few pub owners and employees, including the woman who owns
what used to be the pub that is the model for Sullivan’s in my County Cork books. I got an impromptu lesson on Irish whiskey
from a liquor distributor who also happened to be the evening’s entertainment
at a Dublin pub. I talked to one bar
maid who wants to go back to school to become a forensic analyst, and a nice
young man who was planning to go abroad to teach English as a second
language. I talked to yet another pub
owner about the food service regulations imposed on establishments by the
European Union.
In
the past I’ve traveled just to see things, and I loved it then. Now I “see”
things through a different lens, and it’s still wonderful. Plus writing gives me a reason to go places and
talk to people, which is always a good thing since being a writer means
spending a lot of time glued to a chair in front of a keyboard and talking to
the cats.
I
love being a writer.
1 comment:
I loved your post. I need to open my eyes to people, places and things. You give me hope.
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