British Comedy Guide

Block.

Okay, I had nothing to do, so I started writing a stream of consciousness. I had no idea what I was writing about or where it was going but it seems to have developed into a fictional diary type affair. I'm not really sure where I would go with it, or what the point is, or even if I will carry on writing. If anyone has any suggestions about directions to follow (or just want to tell me it's shit and to give up) I would really appreciate it. It's only a first draft so might not make any sense, so please be patient. In fact, I'm not even sure it's comedy. It's certainly not very funny.

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December 15th 11:46: An empty room shouldn't be this warm; it's getting hard to stay awake. My eyelids are heavy and my finger ache. Typing has become a chore. It is hard to remain awake when there is no one there to distract you. This is how I spend my days; filling time. Scrawling away at a keyboard until my hands are numb from qwerterial repetition. The life of a writer is not an exciting one, but it not nearly as dull as the life of an aspiring writer. The only breaks in my mundane schedule are the occasion red rimmed letters or threatening phone calls from one of my many creditors. I'm now failing to convince myself that they will go away if I ignore them long enough. That trick only really works for relationships.

I have been staring at this same paragraph for around an hour now. I have used the word 'stuff' three times in the same elongated sentence. I delete it and rewrite it word for word, hoping that it will make more sense the seventh or eighth time. It doesn't.

I take a sip of coffee. It's not even good coffee. The Clipper ran out a couple of days ago, and I am too lazy to find a supermarket to sell me more. So I have been relegated to own brand industrial grade mud water. Not sure why I'm drinking it, I hate it so much. The hatred is a nice distraction though, it spurs me to raid the kitchen and dredge through the cabinets in favour of an alternative. The writing can wait. Starting with the hot drinks cupboard is the sensible choice. But I'm feeling avant-garde, so I will start with the least likely place and work my way toward the logical starting point. Yes, that seems like a brilliant plan. The Pan-Asian cupboard is stickier than it ought to be. There is something sweet and unpleasant on my hand now, and I'm not delighted about it. Certainly not bothered enough to clean it off though. Oh. Okay. So the search worked. In the back of the cupboard is a jar of coffee. And Clipper to boot. Any temporary excitement though is crushed when I realise it is decaffeinated. Now I must choose between a high caffeine content or a pleasant experience. I decide to punish myself further and stick with the caffeine.

Now that excitement is over, I can continue my job of staring blankly at my computer screen. There was more pan-Asian goo on my hand than I realised, so now my space bar is stickier than I would like. The cursor's insistent blinking is becoming an irritation. I decide that my time would be equally well used if I change the cursor setting to something less infuriating. Only to discover my grandiose intentions outreach my knowledge of Microsoft control settings.

Rewriting the sentence for a ninth time sees me changing one 'stuff' to 'things'. Hardly a huge leap forward in literary evolution, but a step in the right direction, certainly. Upon reflection, 'stuff' worked better. I will keep the repetition and pretend that I am being ironic or something similar. I am secretly subverting Stephenie Meyer's literary monstrosity via the medium of poor vocabulary and syntax. Take that, popular fiction. Although the fact my book contains neither vampires nor vapid emotionless teenagers does make it less obvious. Maybe that's where I am going wrong.

15:20: The thermometer tells me that the room has cooled down at least one degree since last inspection, but I am yet to feel the benefit. Even shedding a layer (clothing, not skin) has had little affect. The cat however seems to like it, stretched out like a broken accordion across the carpet. I'm still not happy with the 'stuff' sentence, despite it's remarkable literary subversion. I might have a tenth attempt. The blinking cursor is daring me. It really is annoying. Why must Bill Gates program it to be so insistently blinking? "Here's another second you're not writing. You are a failure. Give up and work in a call centre." Smug bastard. I'm sure the cursor would love that. It's getting too much exercise blinking away on my screen. It would be delighted if I just closed the document and never opened it again. I'm tempted, but that means the cursor will have won, and he's already terribly self-satisfied. I don't want to give him an excuse. It's time for Countdown now, so my revenge plan will have to wait. I wonder what Rachel is wearing today.

I'll describe the above piece in one word - 'readable'.

That might sound like faint praise but it's actually quite considerable praise. it means that you have the ability to write stuff (see what I did there?) that people will want to read.

On another writers' forum, far far away, I once observed that its vast library of member-written short stories didn't contain one the first paragraph of which hadn't threatened to put me into a coma.

In stark contrast, I read the whole of your piece very easily.

I have no doubt some BCG members will praise your piece highly and I think we can be very certain nobody will be unkind about it.

No matter what may be said by others, the basic truth to take away from this exercise is that you DO have potential as a writer.

What about directions going forward? Is this really a subject I could wring much out of? I might trawl through the threads in writers discussion on writers block and see if I can get any inspiration from there. I can't see me turning this into anything substantial.

Thanks for the comments, much appreciated. I will change to creditors immediately!

Nowt wrong with your writing style, but the content is soooo DULL.

You've written about - typing becoming a chore; running out of coffee; rewriting the same sentence, over and over again; continuing your job of staring at a computer screen; a sticky space bar; a thermometer cooling down; and the piece de resistance: changing cursor settings!

Really, who cares?

it's getting hard to stay awake.

Quite.

Quote: Nat Wicks @ December 15 2010, 2:49 PM GMT

What about directions going forward? Is this really a subject I could wring much out of? I might trawl through the threads in writers discussion on writers block and see if I can get any inspiration from there. I can't see me turning this into anything substantial.

Thanks for the comments, much appreciated. I will change to creditors immediately!

To take it forward you would really need to have a narrative engine. Nice writing style. Nit Picks - or shall I shall I say Nat Picking? - Not sure about your stuff sentence but the awake repetition and rhyming ache jarred a little for me early on. ANd do cursors still blink. And if you position yourself as an aspiring writer in the authorial voice how to you know a writer's life is dull?

Quote: don rushmore @ December 15 2010, 2:53 PM GMT

Quite.

Thanks for that.

Quote: Marc P @ December 15 2010, 2:53 PM GMT

To take it forward you would really need to have a narrative engine. Nice writing style. Nit Picks - or shall I shall I say Nat Picking? - Not sure about your stuff sentence but the awake repetition and rhyming ache jarred a little for me early on. ANd do cursors still blink. And if you position yourself as an aspiring writer in the authorial voice how to you know a writer's life is dull?

Thanks Marc, very helpful. Honestly I hadn't really put much thought in it past putting it on the page. Awake and ache wasn't a conscious decision but you're right, it certainly read a little 'off'.
You're right about 'dull', that's a very silly mistake to make.

Thinkign about it, I reckon that if I were going to continue along this route, this piece (or a much better version) would be just the opening to set the scene. Moving forward there would be action and narrative. I don't think I'd want to continue with the diary format, because it's been done a million times better many times over, and I would be potentially restricting myself.

You've given me a lot to think about :)

I liked it very much. If it is the start of a novel, I would want to read it but it would have to move on and of course the writer for all his/her pains would be successful at the end. Yes it's good, keep at it

Yes I think that would be the intention- this would be a scene setter at the beginning of a short novel, just a very short chapter, and then move straight into action. Maybe repeating the idea of diary entires throughout the story to punctuate the action, so by the time the story finishes, the entires would look totally different to the opening one. Just an idea.

Thanks Bushbaby.

Quote: Nat Wicks @ December 15 2010, 3:02 PM GMT

Thanks for that.

Thanks Marc, very helpful. Honestly I hadn't really put much thought in it past putting it on the page. Awake and ache wasn't a conscious decision but you're right, it certainly read a little 'off'.
You're right about 'dull', that's a very silly mistake to make.

Thinkign about it, I reckon that if I were going to continue along this route, this piece (or a much better version) would be just the opening to set the scene. Moving forward there would be action and narrative. I don't think I'd want to continue with the diary format, because it's been done a million times better many times over, and I would be potentially restricting myself.

You've given me a lot to think about :)

Cheers Nat. Giving it narrative form could be as simple, if this was chapter one, as adding a sentence along the lines of. 'If I hadn't been so bored that day I would never have done what I did.'

Chapter 2 - And in you're in a prison cell or somesuch.

It doesn't have to be a diary, you can still keep it in the first person and just tell the story.

[On diaries mind you - I just read 'Diary of a Nobody' - absolutely hilarious. ]

A very interesting first page.

All show no tell, we know whats happening without being spoon fed.

But what is happening?

You can buy the book when It's published and find out.... *mysterious wavy noises*

It's nicely written.
Probably a good idea to do that sort of thing when your stuck.
You'll get some good jokes just off the top of your head as you go along.

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