Wednesday, July 7, 2021

Why aren't you writing?

 

I love movies.

I love animation and cartoons.

I love music.

These three things have influenced my writing to a degree that the casual reader will never understand.

Most of the titles of my works are named after songs. Usually, at some point in the novel or short story or novella, the part of the song that influenced the story is described as a happening to the point that those familiar with the song will understand the reference. The titles of some upcoming works may not be classic hits, but album cuts that still inspire a story.

The movies? Oh, yeah. That influences my work, too. Remember the scene in Indiana Jones And The Temple Of Doom where Indy uses an inflatable life raft to exit a crashing plane? I adapted that scene and used it in my Justice Security book, Jim Dandy. I even gave credit where credit was due with an stray thought in Joey Justice’s head that it worked for Harrison Ford in that movie, so why wouldn’t it work in the situation that Joey finds himself in?

One reviewer of Mama Told Me Not To Come made a comment that he thought was an insult. I found it to be inspiring, and I took it to heart immediately. The reviewer stated that the novel read like the script to an action movie.

To that person, I will always owe a great big “Thank you”. What he thought was a derogatory statement toward the writing, was actually a compliment. I had deliberately written the story that way, with cuts from one character to another in rapid succession to give the reader a glimpse of things that are occurring simultaneously!

How do cartoons and animation come into my writing?

Read my short story Saturday In The Park. That one gives you the scoop with another improbable possibility, with a character even saying that the event was straight out of a Road Runner cartoon.

Inspiration comes from everywhere. The writer’s job is to take that inspiration and tell an entertaining story, with just enough description of things to allow the reader’s imagination to picture it in their minds.

We are picture painters. We use words instead of paint brushes. And we are still artists, because we paint pictures with words.

My question to those of you that always say that you want to be writers is simple.

Why aren’t you writing?

T. M. Bilderback (but YOU can call me Michael)