The Novel Wants to be Born

The late great Bill Webber, President Emeritus of New York Theological Seminary, once told me that the closest a man comes to experiencing giving birth is writing a book.  Therefore, I wasn’t surprised that it took me nine months to write my first book, Black Shadows and Through the White Looking Glass: Remembrance of Things Past and Present.  This novel I’m working on though, The Summer of Capri, I feel, will be premature.  She wants to be born.  I am writing furiously.  First thing yesterday morning I typed the six pages I had written the previous morning.  Ever write a story in the first person and you come to embody the character, giving birth to him (or her)?  (Aren’t these characters we create composites of us and everyone we’ve ever come in contact with?  Or who we want to be?)

About William Eric Waters, aka Easy Waters

Award-winning poet, playwright and writer. Author of three books of poetry, "Black Shadows and Through the White Looking Glass: Remembrance of Things Past and Present"; "Sometimes Blue Knights Wear Black Hats"; "The Black Feminine Mystique," and a novel, "Streets of Rage." All four books are available on Amazon.com.
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1 Response to The Novel Wants to be Born

  1. Thanks foor a great read

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