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Joseph Mitchell, late of the New Yorker, at Sloppy Louie's, circa 1952. |
About a thousand years ago
or more—back when we used to have winter with ice on the rivers and lakes—I taught
some classes down at New York’s School of Visual Arts.
Just before one class, I
had heard an old blues lyric: “It’s raining soup and all I have is a fork.”
I mentioned it to my
class along with some homily like, “that good writing. Try to find a vividness,
a personality, a wit and humor, a realism, a visceral quality to your writing.
Something people haven’t heard before.”
Orwell said simply, “Never
use a metaphor, simile or other figure of speech which you are used to seeing
in print.”
There are two reasons
for the advice from the two Georges. If people are used to seeing a phrase,
they stop reading it. The language becomes dead. It would be like having a
grilled cheese sandwich every night for a year. Once every few months, ok.
All the time, bleech.
Two, if people do actually read it, they think less of you as a writer. After all, you don’t
think much of them as an audience. Which is why you were ok serving them
grilled cheese for the 49th night in a row.
Today, just about
everyone under 40 in the ad industry—which is just about everyone in the ad
industry—is the product of some professional advertising finishing school. Many
of these people have spent two years or more after college learning how to
create advertising.
(To paraphrase Bernbach,
they are being taught advertising as a science. But “advertising is
fundamentally persuasion and persuasion happens to be not a science, but an
art.”)
To be dark and cynical
about it, I wonder at times if people in these ad schools are being taught to
write. Writing, by the way, is an adjunct of thinking. If you think well, you
write well. And vice versa.
There are three things
you have to do to learn how to write. First, you have to live. You have to get
out of the classroom and onto the whale-ship. Second, you have to read. And read.
And read. You have to read and think about how writers write. How they use
words and phrases and anecdotes and stories and punctuation and grammar to get
themselves read. Third, you have to write. Most copy today is barely longer
than the words on an old Bazooka Joe comic. If you have one piece of copy to
write, write it 19 different ways. Write one-thousand words a day. Every day.
Not just when you’re in the mood. Every day. You’ll get better.
There’s no such thing as
being a born writer. There are only people who become writers. Because they live
it, read it and write it.
Let me spend a couple
hundred words on point two: Reading.
It hardly matters what
you read. Just read something good. You can even read about things that you
think don’t interest you. Like badminton or pigeon-racing. You’ll find that
good writers can make almost any subject interesting.
Here’s a short bit from
Joseph Mitchell in “The New Yorker.” It’s called “The Cave” and it was written
back in 1952, almost five-and-a-half-years before I was born. Mitchell makes me
read and he makes me care.
“Louie is five feet six, and stocky. He has an owl-like face—his nose is hooked, his eyebrows are tufted, and his eyes are large and brown and observant. He is white-haired. His complexion is reddish, and his face and the backs of his hands are speckled with freckles and liver spots. He wears glasses with flesh-colored frames. He is bandy-legged, and he carries his left shoulder lower than his right and walks with a shuffling, head-up, old-waiter’s walk. He dresses neatly. He has his suits made by a high-priced tailor in the insurance district, which adjoins the fish-market district. Starting work in the morning, he always puts on a fresh apron and a fresh brown linen jacket. He keeps a napkin folded over his left arm even when he is standing behind the cash register. He is a proud man, and somewhat stiff and formal by nature, but he unbends easily and he has great curiosity and he knows how to get along with people. During rush hours, he jokes and laughs with his customers and recommends his daily specials in extravagant terms and listens to fish-market gossip and passes it on; afterward, in repose, having a cup of coffee by himself at a table in the rear, he is grave.”
I like
that. I’ve read it one-hundred times and it is still fresh to me. I am learning still from it.
If you’re
a New Yorker and if you read “The New York Times,” or any other well-written newspaper actually, there are few things better than a really good bad review. Of a play,
an opera, a movie, or a restaurant.
Pete
Wells wrote one last Tuesday of Peter Luger Steak House located in pre-hipster
Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Peter Luger was the cathedral of steak in New York, back from the 19th Century, before the five boroughs of the current city were consolidated into greater New York City. It was considered the apotheosis
of porterhouse. Wells has been there dozens of times. And this time, he hated
it.
He wrote
these lines:
“There is almost always a wait, with or without a reservation, and there is almost always a long line of supplicants against the wall. A kind word or reassuring smile from somebody on staff would help the time pass. The smile never comes. The Department of Motor Vehicles is a block party compared with the line at Peter Luger.”
“I know there was a time the German fried potatoes were brown and crunchy, because I eagerly ate them each time I went. Now they are mushy, dingy, gray and sometimes cold. I look forward to them the way I look forward to finding a new, irregularly shaped mole.”If you want to be a writer, or even if you just want to learn how to communicate more effectively, do a little walking, with your head up, like an old waiter. And do a little reading and do a little writing.
And once in a while, if you can afford it, treat yourself to a good steak. If your tastes run in that direction.
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