Thursday, November 17, 2005

Stay Loyal to Your Writing Passions

On a blog called Daytips for Writers I just ran across a reference to a Ray Bradbury book which jogged my memory of a chat with him on the QE2. Which led me to tell his story on that blog, and now to bring it back here. I'd like to make sure I NEVER FORGET it again.

I interviewed Bradbury when I was writing an article on writers at work on the ship's transatlantic crossing (Francis Ford Coppola was finishing a script on that same voyage.)

Bradbury told a story about staying true to our callings. He was saying that we need to stick with our passions, however odd they may seem to others. He told about being into some cartoon spaceman for years after he was considered too old for that kind of interest. Kids made fun of him and he went home and threw out his collection of Captain Whoever.

Then as an adult he tried to succeed as a writer of mainstream nonscifi fiction. Didn't work.

On a lark, he went back to his old interest, wrote a story about a dragon. Years later he picked up the phone. It was the director John Huston. He had run across the old story about the dragon, wanted Bradbury to write a script for him that had the same feel to it. The story was about a white whale. The movie Moby Dick turned out to be Bradbury's breakthrough. And all because he came back to the fantastical that was his love.

5 comments:

Irene Latham said...

We are so of like minds...thanks for citing Daytips for Writers. Lucky you, interviewing Bradbury. My favorite writing quote is his -- I keep it posted on my website. ""Love. Fall in love and stay in love. Write only what you love, and love what you write. The key word is love. You have to get up in the morning and write something you love, something to live for."
- Ray Bradbury

Anonymous said...

I have a hard time a lot of days focusing on the love of writing. Do you have any ideas about how to make that more constant?

Anonymous said...

seems to me that things work best for me & others when i DO what i ReallyReally want to do, & dont do what i ReallyReally dont want to do-these're extremes for me ,& often i do or dont things i'd rather not or prefer in order to get things important to me. But @ the extremes, ive always paid heavily for acting contrary to my ReallyReally's.

Anonymous said...

to r--writing seems lots like the rest a life, that way--love yr quote.

Anonymous said...

The concept of the Reallyreallys is wonderful. Makes good sense too.