I turn to fiction in the winter, both the reading
and writing of it. I’ve often wondered why this is, and have come to the
reluctant conclusion that death is inspirational.
Last year about this time I began writing a novel.
It is the second such book I have written, the first back in my twenties which
was also started during the cold snowy months. Both plots are driven along in
no insignificant way by death. This is not to say that the stories are about death, but rather that death
serves as an excellent driver of plots.
In winter, it’s hard to escape death. It’s everywhere
around you. Green gets replaced by gray. Leaves wither into brown and fly away
except for the ones that stubbornly cling to the branches of tall oak trees,
making them look sickly and tattered. Then the cold comes and the plants on the
deck turn pale green and rubbery. The lush green lawns of the suburbs become
matted and powdery, the color of sand.
Unlike the death of men, this is just a season. We
know that in a few months time, the color will come back. We know this because
it is reliably true. It happens every year. Still, to watch the world around us
shrivel and die three months every year has always visited waves of melancholy
upon me along with bouts of introspection. Ultimately, I escape to the reading
and writing of fiction.
Once again, I’m feeling the itch to create
something. The germs of ideas have lately come to life in my imagination. Most
of them I reject because I lose interest so easily. Once they are rejected, I
can’t even recall what they were, so complete is their banishment. Others
fester up there for days, then weeks, until finally I find myself sitting here
writing.
But if I’m going to write another book, I better get
started while it’s winter. Once it’s warm and green again, I would much rather
be outside living my real life than putzing around in an imaginary one.
Here’s a project for all of you literature fans. I
wonder what percentage of the greatest novels ever written were started during
winter? I’m willing to bet 75%.
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