Notes on the Writing Life: Erica Jong

Notes on the Writing Life

Notes on the Writing Life
Showing posts with label Erica Jong. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Erica Jong. Show all posts

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Erica Jong, trooper poet


I heard Erica Jong speak recently. I went out of curiosity to see the author of Fear of Flying. It was her first novel, and, if I remember correctly, it sold 18 million in 27 languages. But most of all it shook the world with its frank eroticism, told from a woman's point-of-view.

I thought she would be 90 by now, but she looks like a contemporary (that is, early-60-something). She was natural and open — authentic: she charmed the audience. "Being famous means that an awful lot of people know the wrong things about you." True. I didn't know that she is — first, first, and first — a poet. I didn't know she'd won awards. I didn't know she was such a hard-working writer. The fame of Fear of Flying was something she said she had to deal with, ignore. It was, for her, both a blessing and a curse.

Some snippets from her talk:

She spent all of her 20s trying to write Fear of Flying. She rewrites a lot and gives up often -- pulling a manuscript back out of the drawer years later.

She talked about the subject of a poem before reading. For one, she explained that Sapho's poetry was discovered on the papyrus used to wrap a mummified sacred alligator. "That's the type of thing that drives a poet crazy." I agree!

She's now working on what she called "auto-fiction" (a term created by a French professor): autobiography + fiction. "Life has no plot," she said, so the true account must be reshaped to create a story. (The process is the same for biographical fiction.)

She's written a book on writing called Seducing the Demon; Writing for my Life. I'm interested in reading it.
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