Gary Percesepe: Why I Write
I’ve written six books, two of them novels. I’m at work on a seventh. But you won’t find copies of them laying around my house.
I guess that’s because they are not
that important to me. What else can I say? I mean, I wrote them, I worked hard
on them. They meant something to me at the time, but they don’t mean the same
thing to me now. Things change. The books remain the same, but I’ve changed in
relation to them.
So if you ask me, why do I write, if I am to answer honestly (writers are notorious liars, especially when asked about writing) I have to say that it is not about making a book, and it is certainly not about publication.
So if you ask me, why do I write, if I am to answer honestly (writers are notorious liars, especially when asked about writing) I have to say that it is not about making a book, and it is certainly not about publication.
So what
is it?
I don't
really know. But I think it is has something to do with the sound of that funny
little IBM Selectric ball striking the page in the 70s and 80s, or earlier,
those blue spiral notebooks I filled in high school with my spidery
handwriting. My cursive was nearly illegible, so I printed my letters in a tiny
script that I cannot read now without glasses. Maybe I couldn’t afford many
notebooks in those days, or maybe I wrote small because I knew my ideas were
small, and I didn’t want anyone to see them? Or these days, maybe it is about
the magic cursor floating, moving with me, accompanying me, left
to right, and deeper down the lighted screen of my laptop.
And I’m
aware that this thing I do, writing, is not about me at all.
I’m just
a way for the work to get itself written.
There are
times when I am bored, writing. Frequently, I write with little hope. On my
best days, I write through it. I’ve written, or been written through, things I
never set out to write. Nevertheless, it arrives. I’d be a liar if I said I
knew how.
My
marriage is gone. The kids, too, in different cities. One day, you just look
around, and it's gone, all of it.
So
increasingly, I write these things because these are the things that I
remember. And I want them back. At the same time, I guess I like the idea of
them moving forward, into someone else's life. A reader, sure. OK, why not. But
I feel that I am less and less a part of the picture. Just in the draft of
thought, as Heidegger put it.
Maybe
writing is that thing you do when you are yourself under erasure. You are the
least of it, that's for sure.
Writing
is a negative capability, for me. As in last night, at my friend Kate’s house,
looking out at an empty field while children played at a birthday party. In the
field, I am the absence of field.
For
months now, for over a year, really, I have found myself saying repeatedly, I
don't care. The list of things I do not care about is growing, rapidly.
Opinions. Pronouncements. Newscasts. The puffed chest. Television. Academic
conferences. Fiction & poetry readings. Social media. Food. Politics. New
York City, my home. I don't care. It is in the emptying that I am finding
happiness, in the daily letting go, of everything except the children. Writing,
then, becomes the act of receiving, transmitting, what is happening without me.
Gary Percesepe is Associate Editor at BLIP Magazine (formerly Mississippi
Review), and a Contributor at The Nervous Breakdown. A former
assistant fiction editor at Antioch Review, his fiction, poetry, essays,
and interviews have been published at Story Quarterly, N + 1, Salon,
Mississippi Review, The Millions, PANK, Westchester Review, TNB,
and other places. He is the author of four books in philosophy, including
Future(s) of Philosophy: The Marginal Thinking of Jacques Derrida. He
just completed his second novel, Leaving Telluride, set in Telluride,
Colorado. This piece on writing is from his memoir-in-progress.