This week's guest, Seattle novelist Heather Barbieri, has published Snow in July, The Lace Makers of Glenmara, and most recently The Cottage at Glass Beach. Booklist, in a starred review, calls Cottage “[a] wonderful, subtle, transporting story” - which also describes the story of how Heather first got published. Enjoy! - Meg
It was a rainy afternoon in 1971, and my friend Kyle and I, deterred from climbing the 70-foot tree in the backyard by inclement weather, had embarked on a suburban adventure that was something of a departure: We mixed together all the ingredients in my dad’s workshop, trying to make rocks. Several empty jars and canisters later, we’d managed to create a stippled brown solid and were holding the miraculous lump in our hands in wonder, when he came upon us there, standing on the splotched cement floor, his face pale, his voice a hoarse whisper: “Promise me you’ll never do this again.”
He was too scared to ground me—an unprecedented development. In those early years—and yes, sometimes now too—he probably didn’t know quite what to do with me, that child who stayed up all night reading, had a dangerous penchant for exploring construction sites, and wandering too far from home. He’d be the first to tell you that I’ve always had a creative impulse, and that he was relieved when I decided to take up the pen, a tool that was, at least on the surface, a safer, if not exactly well-paying, occupation.
The journey from the 1969 split-level home in which I grew up to the published page didn’t unfold quite as I imagined. Publishing a novel by 30 didn’t happen. What did was a series of odd jobs to pay the bills (temping—great for getting up the typing speed; teaching piano lessons; training to drive tour buses in Alaska—and frightening the heck out of other motorists; because I’m petite and looked 10 years younger, thereby making them think a 12-year-old was at the wheel); working as a writer and editor for regional magazines that no longer exist; going freelance to raise a family—then turning to fiction when it became too difficult to talk on the phone, short stories at first, which won a handful of prizes few people have ever heard of, and were published in small literary magazines. (I did try the New Yorkera couple of times, as so many of us do, receiving encouraging hand-written notes in return, thinking they meant something—when the editor in all likelihood was being polite.) A short story collection eventually garnered me an agent, though not a sale. A novel followed, which also didn’t go anywhere but the bottom of an old file cabinet, now in an inaccessible part of the storage room.
I was in my late 30s by then. This writing career thing wasn’t going according to plan. But life rarely does, does it? “Write what you know,” my agent at the time said. But what the hell did I know anyway? I’d always been a driven achiever (typical firstborn), and where had it gotten me—certainly not quite where I wanted to be. I was watching my kids playing one afternoon, as I’d once played all those years ago. They were making sandcastles at the beach, carefully shaping each section, starting again when the sea washed part of it away, totally focused on the structure, the craft, with such a sense of wonder and discovery—something I realized I’d lost sight of.
From that moment on, I decided to focus on craft and the joy of the process and let go of everything else—the grand ambitions, the frustrations—and just try to write a good story. Eventually, that novel, Snow in July, was accepted for publication by Soho Press just before I turned 40. I’ve had two other novels (The Lace Makers of Glenmara and The Cottage at Glass Beach, both from Harper) published since then.
The official book tour for Cottage has just wrapped up, and in a couple of weeks or so, I’ll be returning to the blank page again, that place where dreams begin, calling on that younger—and in some ways purer—version of myself as I start to write again, navigating that next part in a writer’s journey, from idea, to story, the hoped-for destination of not just publication, but true worthiness. Writing, for me, like life, is an apprenticeship. In the end, I just hope to get better at what I do—to write something that will keep readers up all night reading, awakening the child within them, too. - Heather
This post originally ran on 1st Books: Stories of How Writers Get Started, hosted by Meg Waite Clayton, author of The Wednesday Sisters, the forthcoming The Wednesday Daughters, and other novels. 1st Books features award-winning writers blogging about how they got started writing and publishing, as well as other readerly and writerly delights.
Comment
Comment by Nichole L. Reber on January 3, 2013 at 9:23am From this I think the takeaway is to just let go. I'm happy for you that you learned storytelling was what mattered to you. That very same realization has helped me to write better (and more) recently. Cheers to you!
@NicholeLReber
Comment by Julia Kyle on August 8, 2012 at 11:35pm It's fascinating reading about other author's publishing journeys. Great article
Comment by Kamy Wicoff on August 8, 2012 at 7:57am Meg -- these posts are even more meaningful to me now as I am trying to write my first novel, and struggling to maintain perspective. And Heather -- I am also feeling pressured and rushed at times, being a first-born too -- so thank you for this reminder of what makes it all truly come together, for the writer and her reader, too.
Comment by Juanita Davis-King on August 7, 2012 at 2:05pm Congratulations. This is such a wonderful accomplishment.
Comment by Pamela Olson on August 7, 2012 at 9:13am You're over 40? You look under 30! I guess the focus on wonder and discovery is keeping you young. :)
Comment by B. Lynn Goodwin on August 7, 2012 at 7:56am I love watching your career grow and develop, Meg.
Heather, you are so right when you say "life doesn't go as planned." Mine continues to surprise me. I've only written one YA novel (unpublished) but when I list the writing I've done, from books, to blogs, to contract work, I surprise myself.
Comment by Carla Hunter Southwick on August 7, 2012 at 7:53am How I identify with what you've written here, Heather! I raised the same dismay/consternation/concern in my dear father a life time ago. I'm going to keep this to refer to when I need to fine tune my focus. Well done!
very inspirational
Comment by Normandie Ward Fischer on August 7, 2012 at 4:40am Such fun to know about another's journey, even if only a tidbit or two.
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