In honour of the Arthur Ellis Awards for Crime Writing shortlists being released this week, a good friend asked the question: How the heck do we actually find time to write the stuff that is up for the awards tonight?
My tricks.…
Okay, these are not the definitive rules for
Writer-parents. I would never claim to be an expert. But I did raise two kids while writing
stand-up on the side and penning a syndicated humour column every two weeks. So
I learned a few things about survival along the way.
Bad Girl’s Tricks for Writing with Kids:
1. Probably
you shouldn’t lock yourself in the bathroom, so the kids can’t get at you.
Equally, you shouldn’t sit in the playpen with your kid on the outside,
screaming and shaking the thing. Okay,
at least not more than once a day.
2. Never
put a package of Twinkies in front of a toddler so that you can continue to
write. (Remove them all from the plastic wrappers first so the kid doesn’t
choke.)
3. A
kid won’t die if they drink half a mug of cold coffee. But watch the wine. In fact, you might want
to finish the rest of the bottle right now, just to be safe.
4. Breast-feeding
can be a real timesaver, but not during Bouchercon book-signings.
5. Other
kid’s birthday parties are a great thing for a writer. But you really should
pick up your own kid when they’re over. (Eventually. Before winter.)
6. It’s
okay to get someone to babysit your kids while you move into a new house. But
it’s not okay to forget to tell anyone where that house is.
7. When
your kid leaves home for university, it is not recommended to immediately
change their room into a study or writing room. Wait until after Christmas. The
sales are better.
Re “Leaving the nest”: Every mother gets emotional
about this. But probably you shouldn’t do it until your kids are grown up.
Do you have tricks? Leave them below in the comments. Please. Hurry.
Postscript: The Arthur Ellis Award shortlist events were held two nights ago in major cities across Canada.
The jaw-dropping surprise: I am shortlisted with Margaret Atwood for the Arthur! Never, not ever, did I expect to see my name linked with CanLit Royalty. Damned honoured.
Do you have tricks? Leave them below in the comments. Please. Hurry.
Postscript: The Arthur Ellis Award shortlist events were held two nights ago in major cities across Canada.
The jaw-dropping surprise: I am shortlisted with Margaret Atwood for the Arthur! Never, not ever, did I expect to see my name linked with CanLit Royalty. Damned honoured.
Okay,
I admit it. I would rather be the proud possessor of a rare gemstone than
a
lakefront condo with parking. Yes, I know this makes me weird. Young women
today are supposed to crave the security of owning their own home.
But I say this: real estate, shmeel estate. You can’t hold an address in your hand. It doesn’t flash and sparkle with the intensity of a thousand night stars. It will never lure you away from the straight and narrow like a siren from some Greek odyssey.
Let’s face it. Nobody has ever gone to jail for smuggling a one bedroom plus den out of the country.
However, make that a ten-carat cyan blue topaz with a past as long as your arm, and I’d do almost anything to possess it.
But don’t tell the police.
The
Goddaughter’s Revenge, winner of the
2014 Derringer (in US) and Arthur (in Canada) is available at Chapters/Indigo stores, Barnes&Noble, and
online retailers everywhere.