Ask the Author: Benjamin Constable

“Ask me a question.” Benjamin Constable

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Benjamin Constable Since my earliest memories I have dreamt of flying. It was something I could do at will, whenever I remembered that it was possible. I would just kind of relax and concentrate at the same time and my body would levitate, sometimes just above head height or sometimes high above the world, swept along by the wind. Would that flying had been for pleasure. unfortunately it never sprang to mind when I was having a good time. Flying was always a brilliant and skillful means of escape from bad things. It was my joker, my get out of trouble card that my dreams have always provided. I think I'm not the only one. I think a lot of people dream like this.

I had just written a book called Three Lives of Tomomi Ishikawa. It's a book about Paris and New York and friendship and murder. I wanted my next book to have no murders, no gimmicks. I wanted it to show another side of life, or another side of the way I see life. But what it has in common with Three Lives is the idea that stories are all around us and it is just a question of how we frame them.

Books are rarely just one idea. My books and my understanding of other people's books is that they are a collection of ideas gathered and stitched together. I saw an article about an exhibition at the V&A museum in London called something like: Great Inventors of the Arab World. I got stuck on a picture of a man in a flying machine and read about the 9th Century inventor Abbas Ibn Firnas from Andalusia in the South of Spain which was at the time part of the Caliphate of Mohamed I. Abbas Ibn Firnas fascinated me. He was a polymath. He had invented a way of cutting crystal and he wrote poetry. He also was also the first historical figure to have been documented as flying. He had built wings from wax feathers and silk, and jumped from the tower in Cordoba and flew 200 metres. He broke both his legs on landing, but he was the first person to fly. He was 70.

A friend told me the story of how he took his then boyfriend to meet his grandmother who had dementia. She thought the boyfriend was a prince come to woo her. Another friend told me about a canal boat that is a travelling opera. I since found another canal boat which is a theatre. I wanted to write about not fitting in and wanting to make art - these are big parts of my own development. I wanted to write about France and how, particularly in the countryside, the war still has influence. While I was writing this book, everything I saw and everybody I met seemed to connect in to this story. Maybe it is about me and the many conflicting arguments about everything.
Benjamin Constable Today I'm doing goodreads things because I have a new book coming out and I want to be up to date. I've got a vast and long list of things I want to do to give my book its best possible outing with the most modest means.

About a year ago I started a book about a library (its a kind of psychological thriller). It got put to one side because of life, but I'm pretty much ready to go back to it. That said I'm not planning on doing any writing until the new year and then, I have a few projects I'd like to be working on. I'll have to choose. For the moment though, I'm between writing tasks and just thinking about trying to get my book LOVE AND INVENTION out there and imagining what life would be like if I caught up with all the things I wanted to do and could just cruise along...
Benjamin Constable Growing a beard?

No, finishing a draft of a book.

No, going exploring, chasing an idea and talking to people and finding leads and connections that take you to the next thing. It's a twisty adventure in itself and it has in someways become the model for the content of my books. What I love is exploring and experimenting, trying things out and finding new things.

I love playing with words too. I love find a passage of awful writing and going back and reading it out loud and slowly juggle and whittle away at it until it works.
Benjamin Constable WRITE!!!

Seriously, the definition of a writer is somebody who writes stuff. The only thing standing between you and being a writer is your decision to pick up a pen. Motivation is a funny subject but there are some powerful techniques to harness yours. Ask yourself these questions: What do I want to write? Why do I want to write? Who will I be when I have written? What is the first step to writing (you can do this same question for the second, third and fourth steps as well)? And then, how can I commit to doing this? It might be about making some time for yourself, it might be a text message to yourself or a note in your diary or an alarm on your phone. A powerful way of harnessing your motivation is to make a habit or a routine and attach it to some other routine you have (like, I write for half an hour every evening before I have an early evening drink). I find the most powerful ideas that get me to write are ones of identity. I say to myself: I am a writer. I say, I can take on and finish big projects; that is my nature; that is who I am.

Everybody has their own needs and strategies, it is up to each one to find what works, but you are motivated to do all kinds of things in your life. Have a look at what gets you to do things and learn from it and reproduce it.
Benjamin Constable Walking around, looking for unexpected things, talking to unexpected people and listening to their stories. Books take so long to write you really have the time to be thinking about the next big idea, gradually pulling it together, finding new connections and ways to link it to a hundred other ideas.
Benjamin Constable I don't really get writer's block. There are days when I don't, or can't, write as much as I'd like, for reasons like the Internet and a host of other distractions. Concentration is a real issue and one that I could write an essay about. But my understanding of writers block is that it's about not knowing what to write. I see stories everywhere, woven in to everybody's lives; the question is how to frame them. There's a metaphor that I find useful and that is of a photographer framing a shot - there are questions to be asked like how much context do I want to show. But the more you take photos the beauty you see around you. When you start looking for stories they are right there spilling out in front of you. Choosing which one to write is again another subject, but I try to just write without focussing on it good or worthy. The desire for perfection stops us all from doing so many things. I try to be kind to myself and write whatever comes. If it's rubbish, I throw it away, if I like it, I rework it and rework it until it becomes something I can be proud of.

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