#Music & #ComicArt Help Fill The #Imagination Room for #Writers

Many students and writing comrades have told me of their need for silence when they write. I’ve never been one for silence; my ears quickly become distracted by any noise, be it a plane overhead, some neighbor’s car door, the heater. This could just be due to the fact I’ve got a squirrel’s attention span.

Or, it could be due to the fact I’m a parent with kids who are always, ALWAYS noisy: cars crash, transformers explode, trains go off cliffs, animals eat each other–they are all of them dramatic, violent little buggers. If they’re quiet, then that just means they’re using stealth to accomplish something even more devious, like treating the oven dials as spaceship controls.

So quiet’s not exactly a writing option round these parts. I need to isolate my imagination’s internal senses with visuals and sounds.

It begins with snapshots, like slides on a projector. Just pictures at first, distant and untouchable, until more slides come, a photogenic click click click of a paperless book. The cassette player ka-chunks and music sneaks into the space, quiet and wary until it meets the beat of the slides and then maybe, if I time it just right, I can jump into the images like double-dutch and land, smack. I’m there. I’m in. And I can feel it all.

With Book 1 of the Fallen Princeborn Omnibus due for release this fall, I’m already hip-deep in Book 2. New world-building needs arose involving some minor characters, and for the first time in I don’t know how long, I couldn’t see their world. I’m just sitting in a blank room of silence, the projector shining this white rectangle of nuthin’.

And with the kids on spring break for two long, LONG weeks, the time to focus my search was not coming. I’d dust off one snapshot of just a character’s arm, or some sort of shadow-blob in the background. The next day I just get a bruise-ish color, but no shapes.

It was so infuriating I even vented to Bo about it. I need something that looks alive, I said.

“Living buildings.”

No, not alive, just looking alive.

“Looking…?”

And in the water. A dark place, but they gotta see where they’re going.

(Oh yes, he’s furrowing his brow through this entire exchange.) “Dark, but…there’s light?”

Yes.

“And that’s supposed to be here, like, on Earth?”

Yes.

“O-kay.”

Hopeless, I thought. I’m stuck forever.

An hour later, after the boys have read about outer space and trucks, and Blondie learned what Roald Dahl’s Mathilda will do to anyone who rips up a library book, Bo emails me a search result of images. Take a look here. Notice where they come from? Comic books.

Duh. Why didn’t I think of this? Marvel and DC both have lords of the sea in their lore: Namor the Sub-Mariner, and Aquaman.

But in studying the Aquaman archive, I find my own shoulders hunching into a “meh” position. I don’t want to make yet another version of Atlantis.

Then two things happen at once: a happy accident, you could say.

First, I open a different file from Bo:

new-atlantis

Click.

The blue. The cold darkness balanced with light. The living feel of the dome and rock…at last, a clear slide! In my mind’s projector I can finally sit on the bench, staring, waiting for the cassette player to come on, or another slide to click into place.

Nuthin’.

Oh, Imagination is shaking the box for the other slides. It’s crawling on hands and knees to search under benches and that sad excuse of a cart with rust on the bottom shelf and a cracked wheel.

Still not found. Not for three. Damn. Days.

On a borrowed computer, I find an album I haven’t listened to in ages:

Dune.

Yes, the David Lynch film, scored by Toto.

As a kid, I only paid attention to the film when Captain Picard and all the good guys with the weird blue eyes rode on giant worms and blasted baddies into smithereens. The music was super dramatic with its drums, choir, guitar, orchestra. The first minute here should give you a sense of that (Ignore the second minute with the creepy kid):

Way, way back, in the corner of the storage room, Imagination digs up an old cassette tape. Something eerie. Distinctly awed. Cautious.

It was from Dune.

I start skimming the tracks, and by God, I find it.

Ka-chunk.

Imagination turns up the volume. The slide deepens. I step forward, as cautious as the choir. The rhythm is slow, deceptive. Imagination nudges me into the minor harmonies and invisible currents. Will I tangle them, ruin their power? Will I fall, bloody the ground?

I might.

But it’s a risk worth taking, every time.

 

31 thoughts on “#Music & #ComicArt Help Fill The #Imagination Room for #Writers

    • Trees are often done, yes, but I think it’s *how* they look alive can vary. I mean, you have Tolkien, who flat out made them walk and talk. You have Baum, who made them stuck in one place but could still talk and move. And then you have M. Night Shyamalan who had the trees totally sedentary but emitted poisonous chemicals into the air to make people kill themselves. So there’s always a new possibility in how things look alive. 🙂

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  1. Your descriptions of your creative process are a story in their own right. They make a lovely read, though it sounds like a frustrating journey. Give Bo an extra hug- hooray for helping you find those images that were missing!!! From the bits of story I’ve seen, I can’t wait to see how it all comes together- it’s going to be a marvelous read, I can tell! 🙂 xxxxx

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  2. The thing I find, is that it never works in quite the same way twice. Sometimes an overheard word is all I need, but catching it is not predictable, mostly, like you, I make searches. Nicely described. Glad you got there, but it was clear your determination was going to get you there eventually. Good luck with the writing.

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    • Thank you so much! You’re quite right that we can’t always promise ourselves that one method will work all the time–rather like the various ways Lucy gets into Narnia. Sometimes a song will throw me into a story moment all on its own, or something on the commute to my daughter’s school will plant itself in my brain and slowly grow every day I drive by…
      Thank you again for reading!

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  3. You, as ever, describe your writing journey in such a vivid way – and you’re right. There is NEVER a time when you can nail down that process and know that it’s going to work every time you sit down… What a lovely way of finding your way into that particular scene – far more poetic than my own riff of imaging Miranda’s Tempest as a piece of erotic fiction!

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    • LOL! Oh thank you, Friend. This is something I want to touch on another music post, when a certain song was on while I was taking my daughter to school and the surroundings just slammed me with a story. 🙂 We really don’t know when inspiration will strike!

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