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- WHY I WRITE BOOKS

- by Vicki Hinze
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Vicki Hinze
is an award winning novelist with eleven novels to
date --- four within six months. Her latest, ACTS OF HONOR,
published by St. Martin's Press has been hailed as a "Spellbinding.
Heart-stopping suspense." by Meryl Sawyer, author of Half
Moon Bay. She lives in Niceville, Fl with her husband (a retired
Air Force Lt. Col.). Visit Vicki online at www.vickihinze.com
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- All writers are asked
why they write. Often, more than once, and often, the
writer fumbles for an answer because s/he hasn't truly defined
the one single reason that s/he writes. This is probably the
one question I am asked most often.In many ways, writing is a
lonely, isolated profession. Definitely difficult for a people
person. The pay is more often lousy, if not nonexistent, than
a decent wage for the time and effort expended. The odds of "making
it" are daunting. So why do writers do it?
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- Some say, "I write because I have to write."
This is true, and yet it doesn't really explain the "why."
Have to. Have to? Is someone holding a gun to your head? Threatening
you, if you don't write? No. So that surface motivator isn't
the one that keeps you putting the pen to the page. Some say,
"I enjoy the process." This, I can tell you, comes
from a writer who has yet to suffer slogging through writing
books that emotionally drain the writer, tax his or her nerves,
and test his or her convictions. Writers seldom enjoy the process.
It's challenging, demanding, and unrelenting in
its own right. The enjoyment comes when the process is over and
the book is done.
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- A writer might enjoy the process when the book is proceeding
smoothly, but when that initial burst of energy and enthusiasm
fades, the writing process becomes work. Demanding, hard work.
That can, in a sense, be enjoyable, but it alone is too taxing
and too demanding to keep a writer writing books. Something deeper
must sustain the writer. Something much deeper.In a career riddled
with a multitude of rejection letters, sporadic sales, and more
challenges than rewards, I have often asked myself why I keep
putting myself through this. There are far easier ways to earn
a living. I gave up a lucrative career to write, one where my
earnings were substantially greater than they are now. I switched
from writing in a genre where I was well established to write
in another, where I was not established. None of the standard
answers dug deep enough to truly answer the question--Why do
it?
I had to dig deeper.For me, the answer came at the grocery store.
(For some reason, I, who do not cook, tend to have epiphanies
at grocery stores.) Right there in the aisle between the potato
chips and Fruit Loops, the answer to this often-asked question
body-slammed me. I write books because I have something to say.
Now, I'm not a soapbox queen; no novelist is given that luxury.
I mean, I have something to say I want others to hear. Something
that will entertain them--always a novelist's first responsibility--and
hopefully, if I dedicate myself to using every single skill I
possess wisely--something that will also offer readers an opportunity
to see something I'm exploring in the book in a different way.
I'll offer a new perspective, a new insight. Something that will
open a door in a reader's mind that was previously closed.What's
the microscopic view inside this writer's mind? What fuels my
persistence, determination? An example: Picture it. Your house.
January 10, 2000. Freezing rain patters against your roof. You're
snuggled in a warm bed, your husband beside you, your children
sleeping soundly in their rooms down the hall. The grandfather
clock you inherited from your mother, who had inherited it from
hers, chimes three times, and you wonder what little creak awakened
you.
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- Something hard and cold presses against your temple. You
snap your eyes open. Soldiers surround your bed and you're looking
down the barrel of an M-16. From the smell, it's been fired recently.
Your heart races, fear bombards you, and you think, This can't
be happening here. I live in a civilized society. This is the
new millennium, for God's sake.But it is happening here. In your
home. At gunpoint, you, your husband, and your children--two
teenage sons and a twelve-year-old daughter are driven out of
your home into the freezing rain. Your husband and sons are separated
from you and your daughter. Your identity is stripped from you--nothing
leaves the house that proves who any of you are. You and your
daughter are treated violently and told to get out of the country.
Walking. In the freezing rain. Without coats or slippers or any
other possessions. You begin walking, knowing you'll never again
hear your grandmother's clock chime. You're stunned. Have you
really just been forced from your home at gunpoint, your family
ripped away from you?
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- You leave what had been your home with nowhere to go, carrying
nothing but fear and terror . . . and memories.
- Who among us can forget the haunting scenes of the Holocaust,
the ethnic cleansing? Who among us can not be touched?Man's inhumanity
to man is as difficult to swallow now as it has been throughout
the course of human history. We have those who prevent these
events. Those who perpetrate them. Those who suffer the fallout
from them.
And we have those who are so deeply touched emotionally by them
that their lives are never the same. Different perspectives battle
inside their minds. They see everyone's point of view, and no
one's point of view. Nothing--nothi
ng--can justify man's inhumanity to man. I write books because,
despite our civility and progress and enlightenment, situations
such as the one above still happen in our world. I write books
because greed and fear still rule, still snuff out the little
voice inside us that asks, "What if I were on the receiving
end of this act I'm committing? Would I still do it? Would I
still consider it just? Essential? An act committed in good faith?"
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- I write books to explore obstacles and sacrifices, to quiet
the nagging little voice inside me that never becomes silent.
The voice that insists human beings can coexist without war.
We all bleed. We all suffer. We all mourn our dead. If we can
all do that, then we also have the capacity to act in good faith.Once
an idealist, I believed that good works reap only good things.
But the world quickly shatters the illusions of simplistic beliefs.
Yet the world, even at its worst, can't kill our dreams or wishes
or beliefs. Not unless we choose to let them die. We must choose.
And I did. I chose to dream and believe.Greed and self-interest
determine not only the paths of individuals, but of nations.
Too few ask: What will best serve all? Too many ask: What will
best serve me? And yet, we continually see acts of goodness and
kindness--proof humanity still lives. We see others, who have
little, opening their arms and homes, sharing their meager possessions
(material and emotional and spiritual) with those in need. For
the rest of us, these acts spark the hope that resides in all
of us to keep striving, to keep caring about not just ourselves,
but about all of us. I write because human beings need hope.
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- To foster change, we must be aware of the challenges in our
world and of the events and people who spark hope. I refuse to
give up on us. I refuse to accept that we are not made of sterner
stuff, that we must accept what we are
told is an inevitable truth: So long as there are men, there
will be greed. And so long as there is greed, there will be no
peace.Perhaps a little of the idealist still exists inside me.
Perhaps it is the nurturer of the little voice. And perhaps there
is an inevitable truth in the link between greed and peace in
mankind. But that one link is not all of the truth.
- Peace can begin with a single individual, with a lowly writer
who has something to say she wants others to hear. If she has
the courage to open her soul and share her visions of challenges
and obstacles and constructive solutions, some who hear will
"get" it. Some won't. But those who do, will
find their own little voices awakened. And awakened, they will
no longer be content in their apathy, and they will awaken others.
We can't diminish the impact of the ripple effect, nor should
we underestimate how many sparks are
required to light an eternal flame of hope.Even in the face of
adversity, this lowly writer respects the human race enough to
dredge up the courage and dare to hope. That is the something
I have to say. I dare to hope. And that is why I write books.
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- Why do you write books? Do you know? If you do, you have
a wonderful sword with which to meet the challenges that will
inevitably confront you in the course of your career. Every writer
encounters challenges. Regardless of how big, how great their
sales, how terrific everything appears publicly. No writer is
exempt from challenges. Ever. Knowing why you're doing what you're
doing is one of your strongest assets. It is the foundation upon
which you place your professional future. It is also the foundation
upon which you define your character. These treasures are precious
assets, the very root of unshakable faith in your work.If you
don't know why you write, dig. Slice through the veneer and easy
answers and keep digging until you get down to the one single
reason that keeps you devoted and determined. That one reason
is your armor, and your spark of hope.Writers, too, need hope.
They have the ability to change people's lives. With hope, that
change is for the better.
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- So again, I ask you, why do you write books?
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