Starting Over (Which Rocks) by Dean Gloster
For thirty years I
was a lawyer, and part of that time I stared out the window and wished I was
writing fiction instead. Now I’m writing novels. I feel like I’m doing exactly
what I should.
Starting over as a
writer wasn’t easy. I was a partner at a large San Francisco law firm, I had
interesting clients and cases and matters, and it cash-flowed nicely. But we
sometimes get to decide how we’ll spend our days, and none of us know exactly
how many days we have left.
(Me starting a ski race, with my typical high enthusiasm-to-skill ratio)
A year after I
left practicing law, while my debut novel Dessert
First was under submission, I turned Simpsons-character orange and
developed severe abdominal pains that were a symptom either of (1) an unusual
blockage of a gall stone in a duct—fixable with surgery—or (2) an inoperable
tumor from a kind of cancer that would kill me in a few months.
“We’re 90% sure,”
my surgeon Dr. Moorstein said, while an orderly wheeled me into the operating
room, “that it’s an unusual presentation of stones disease.” That is, a 90%
chance of the good outcome.
Which meant a ten
percent chance of Game Over.
Not so good.
I was lying flat
on the gurney, and it was out of my hands then. When he cut me open, he’d find
out which one it was. It would be nice if
I had more time, I thought. My wife was in the waiting room, and my
children, in their twenties, were back at home, entertaining our Christmas
holiday guests while I went in for emergency surgery.
But if it was game over, I realized I was
incredibly grateful that I got to write my novel before I died. I got to do
what I’d always wanted to do. I was weirdly happy and at peace.
If you’re
unexpectedly calm at the prospect of imminent death—even before they give you
anesthesia—that might be a sign you’re living your life right. (Although a
bilirubin count of over 25 cooking your brain into gray ceviche might also be a
mood-contributing factor.)
In my
hobby—downhill ski racing—the only perfect run is the one you haven’t started
yet. Once you kick the start wand, it becomes a series of recovery moves from
mistakes or imperfections.
(Some
mistakes in racing are harder to recover from than others)
There’s something
gloriously perfect about starting over. The almost limitless possibility. When
you start something new, you learn things and you grow in new directions.
I was fortunate,
when my surgeon cut me open, that he found piles of gallstones—not
tumors--where they shouldn’t be. I got a second chance at life.
It’s
good training for a writer to start over. The process of writing a particular
book, if you’re lucky, will teach you how to write it. What it won’t do is
teach you how to write the next book.
The act of finishing something means starting over with something else.
And sometimes, you
have to start over even sooner. I have set novel manuscripts aside, because I
didn’t know enough yet to tell that particular story or because in its current
form it wasn’t my story to tell.
Even if you are one
of those blessed writers who never follows the false tracks of story into the
box canyon of setback, in the uncertain book world you may have to start over
professionally.
Your publisher will
get sold to a larger company. Your editor will depart. Your agent will leave
the agency she is with, orphaning your first book there, and declare on her new
web site that she is “99.9%...not interested in” the kind of book you are now
writing.
It happens.
I know this,
because it has happened to me.
And it’s glorious.
I love the new
novel I’m writing, and I don’t have to answer to anyone but the story itself
and the characters and their voices. I’m far enough along, with a beginning and
an ending and a middle that I’m reshaping, so that it feels like a book, not
just the narrative arc of a bridge I’m building out into fog with hope that
I’ll reach land on the other side.
It will be the
best thing I’ve written yet. Almost equally wonderful, it’s the hardest thing
I’ve ever tried, stretching my capabilities at craft and cutting deeply into
subjects that are close to the bone for me.
That’s how we
grow.
By starting over.
Dean Gloster is a former stand-up comedian
and former law clerk at the U.S. Supreme Court. He lives in Berkeley, California
where he writes novels for young adults. His debut YA novel DESSERT FIRST is out now from Merit Press/Simon Pulse. School Library Journal called it “a sweet, sorrowful, and simply divine
debut novel that teens will be
sinking their teeth into. This wonderful story … will be a hit with
fans of John Green's The Fault in Our
Stars and Jesse Andrews's Me
and Earl and the Dying Girl.” Eleven months ago, in his fifties, Dean
took up Aikido, because why not?
Great post. I've shared it on Facebook
ReplyDeleteThank you, Berek! Be well.
ReplyDeleteThis touches so many nerves with me Dean, not worth mentioning here except I had my own moment on the operating table five years ago, but thank you for posting. I'll share with my writing friends who also have similar raw nerves. So glad the 90% was on your side. Still remembering the good days at FBM. Looking forward to book 2.
ReplyDeleteThanks! I remember the good days at FBM too. I was the last in our writer's group to get a book out. Write on and be well.
ReplyDeleteGreat post, Dean! Facing that scary 10% option certainly puts stuff like having an agent leave, etc. into perspective.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Janet! And it really does.
ReplyDeleteSo spot on, Dean! Thank you for sharing your optimism and your personal journey.
ReplyDeleteThanks! My pleasure. It was fun.
ReplyDeleteThis is fantastic. Fave line: The only perfect run is the one you haven't started.
ReplyDelete