That, and oh so much more, is what Dani Shapiro explores in Still Writing: The Pleasures and Perils of a Creative Life (public library) — her magnificent memoir of the writing life, at once disarmingly personal and brimming with widely resonant wisdom on the most universal challenges and joys of writing. 'Still Writing offers up a cornucopia of wisdom, insights, and practical lessons gleaned from Dani Shapiro's long experience as a celebrated writer and teacher of writing. The beneficiaries are beginning writers, veteran writers and everyone in between.'
From the best-selling author of Devotion and Slow Motion comes a witty, heartfelt, and practical look at the exhilarating and challenging process of storytelling. At once a memoir, meditation on the artistic process, and advice on craft, Still Writing is an intimate and eloquent companion to living a creative life.
Through a blend of deeply personal stories about what formed her as a writer, tales from other authors, and a searching look at her own creative process, Shapiro offers her gift to writers everywhere: an elegant guide of hard-won wisdom and encouragement for staying the course. “The writer’s life requires courage, patience, empathy, openness. It requires the ability to be alone with oneself. Gentle with oneself. Imessage iphone 12. To be disciplined, and at the same time, take risks.” Writers—and anyone with an artistic temperament—will find inspiration and comfort in these pages. Offering lessons learned over twenty years of teaching and writing, Shapiro uses her own revealing insights to craft an indispensable almanac for modern writers.
Like Anne Lamott’s Bird by Bird, Virginia Woolf’s A Writer’s Diary, and Stephen King’s On Writing, Dani Shapiro’s Still Writing is a lodestar for aspiring scribes and an eloquent memoir of the writing life.
The title of this book, The Pleasures and Perils of a Creative Life, explains, elegantly, exactly what it is. (More on that in a second.)
Dani Shapiro (b. 1962) is a best-selling memoirist who writes about her own life in a non-ironic, non-sentimental way. She is honest and authentic and generously reflects on the most interesting and personal subjects of a creative life: the living, the creating, and the existing. Not the producing or the having had produced.
I have written seven books, and still I have to remind myself this is what I do, this is my vocation, this is what puts food on the table and pays the mortgage. It’s not a hobby or something I spend my days doing for the sheer joy of it.
Her collection of thoughts—a collection in which consciousness lives and thrives—she reexamines things that we commonly use and need to repurpose; like poet David Whyte’s Consolations, Shapiro grabs and reimagines words like permission, seeds, distance, and guides.1.Of course, Whyte and Shapiro aren’t the only creatives to respeak and reimagine words. Sink into Mark Strand’s “Poet’s Alphabet,” which pays particular attention to words of abstract space and time like oblivion and absence.
Or read Durga Chew Bose’s considered essay on naming and how giving names to things deepens our knowledge but also removes our understanding.1
Or read Durga Chew Bose’s considered essay on naming and how giving names to things deepens our knowledge but also removes our understanding.1
On ambition, Shapiro writes not from the lofty mindset of an established author but from the self-doubting position of a beginner. It is refreshing:
![Still Writing Dani Shapiro Still Writing Dani Shapiro](/uploads/1/3/4/5/134509583/630671823.jpg)
There is nothing wrong with ambition. We all want to win Guggenheims and live and write in the south of France, or some version thereof—don’t we? But this can’t be the goal.
Of the numerous things Shapiro shares, my particular favorites are the strength and danger of our inner censor, a need for mentors, collected precious things we keep nearby, the mutual benefits of rest and play, and the difference between rhythm and discipline.
Still Writing By Dani Shapiro
Discipline calls to mind a taskmaster, perhaps wielding a whip. Discipline has a whiff of punishment to it, or at least the need to cross something off a list. Rhythm, however, is a gentle aligning, a comforting pattern in our day that we know sets us up ideally for our work.
Dani Shapiro Bio
I certainly keep this book close and open it often. My thinking has been much-inspired by Shapiro’s wisdom and thoughtful organization.
Though we are alone in our rooms, alone with our demons, our inner censor, our teachers remind us that we’re not alone in the endeavor. We are part of a great tapestry of those who have preceded us.
Ah, the beauteous human continuum; Shapiro calls it a “tapestry.” Marilynne Robinson calls it “imagined connections.” Our connection to others and to something larger than all of us echoes in Walt Whitman’s poetry, Marcus Aurelius’ philosophy, and certainly George Saunders’ contemplation of human legacy.
Inspired by Shapiro, I’d like to define a word on my own: elegance. Elegance is completeness plus modesty. Nothing present is unnecessary, and nothing necessary is absent. It’s the economy and deliberateness of Thoreau mixed with the enthusiastic generosity of Anna Deavere Smith’s warm, embracing advice to artists of all sorts.
Shapiro reminds us to write from emotion but not to succumb to it. “Grief, joy, hilarity, rage—all of it becomes the medium in which you work. You can’t be feeling it and shaping it at the same time.” 2.Beloved novelist Margaret Atwood touched on this exact theme in her book on the duality of the writing self and the self that makes the writing self possible:
“What is the relationship between the two entities we lump under one name, that of ‘the writer’?
By two, I mean the person who exists when no writing is going forward – the one who walks the dog, eats bran for regularity, takes the car in to be washed, and so forth – and that other, the more shadowy and altogether more equivocal personage who shares the same body, and who, when no one is looking, takes it over and uses it to commit the actual writing.”2
“What is the relationship between the two entities we lump under one name, that of ‘the writer’?
By two, I mean the person who exists when no writing is going forward – the one who walks the dog, eats bran for regularity, takes the car in to be washed, and so forth – and that other, the more shadowy and altogether more equivocal personage who shares the same body, and who, when no one is looking, takes it over and uses it to commit the actual writing.”2
Still Writing By Dani Shapiro
I think my favorite section of a very thoughtfully-written book is this (one that pierces our concept of knowledge and “having had arrived.”
Dani Shapiro Biography
I always think I should know more. That I need more information. That I should outline, perhaps. Or do some research. But really, I need to remind myself that this not-knowing is at the heart of the creative endeavor. Paradoxically, the not-knowing is often what creates the energy, portent, and momentum in the piece of work itself. One of the truest pleasures for the writer alone in a room is when our characters surprise us by doing something unexpected. And so, as we are beginning, the most liberating thing we can do for ourselves is to exist in this state of heightened interest.
To extend a few of the themes from The Perils and Pleasures of a Creative Life even further—most are worth a deep inhale—grab psychologist Rollo May’s critical read on the effects of fear on creativity, physicist Alan Lightman’s In Praise of Wasting Timeon the benefits of rest and play, Dorothea Brande’s wonderful guide to teaching writerly genius, and most of all, Bird by Bird by the inimitable writing teacher Anne Lamott born the same day as Shapiro.