Nicholas Botkin struggles to create meaningful fiction, with Hemingway as his muse; by Yash Seyedbagheri.
The first draft of anything is shit. Amend that. The first draft of anything is shit according to Hemingway, who drank, fought, wrote, then blew his brains out in Idaho. But that’s an unfortunate footnote. At least the others are quantifiable achievements.
As an undergraduate, you change majors from history, to political science, and then creative writing. Too many theories, too many abstractions, too many essays. You’re saturated with theories of executive power, realpolitik, Wilsonian idealism. Drift, discard assignments, As turn to Bs, and threaten to metamorphose into Cs before creative writing finds you. It fulfills a liberal arts requirement, plus your advisor thinks you need a little “release.” Some “balance.” By which they mean emotional balance, you’re certain, an outlet. They’ve seen your sullen glances, absorbed your laconic responses in regards to your academic progress. I’m fine, I like Professor Whitmore’s American Chief Executive class.
Try to find stories, but first find words. Try to form them into something visceral. You might describe dusk as an explosion of lavender and pink. No, a shimmering symphony. It may be purple prose, but it beats mediocrity and saying that dusk is “beautiful.”