A few weeks ago, I
decided to splurge on some new notebooks and two fountain pens. After typing everything directly on the
computer from my notes for several months, I wanted to get back to engaging
with the pen on paper. I wanted to
practice “slow writing.” In my case, it
will be “painfully slow writing”; I am left-handed and have suffered from
severe writer’s cramp for most of my life.
I knew, though, that if I stuck with it long enough, my cramping muscles
would get into shape and I’d be able to write through an afternoon without
stopping every few minutes to massage my claw back into a hand.
After shopping around
on several websites, I ordered three different notebooks to try out—an
Exacompta Basics Black with Silver edge, 5 ½ inches by 8 inches; a
Clairefontaine Basic Black, Large, 8 ¼ inches by 11 ¾ inches; and a
Clairefontaine Basic Black, Medium, 5 7/8 inches by 8 1/8 inches. All three were made in France with high
quality paper. It seems France is the
only country that takes notebooks seriously.
The Exacompta has some texture to the paper with 25% cotton fiber making
it an excellent choice for use with a fountain pen. Clairefontaine is known for making the first
notebooks that French students are required to use in school and the quality of
their paper is legendary. When I took
students to Paris one long ago summer, I filled my suitcase for the return trip
back to the states with large Clairefontaines I found in a huge stationary store. I loved those notebooks and used them for my
journal for years.
I use a variety of
fountain pens collected over the years:
Waterman, also made in Paris; Conklin, one of the oldest American
fountain pen companies; Cartier, French yet again; and Sheaffer, in cheap
models that write with a solid, wet line.
I find a good ink flow eases the writer’s cramp, but with the Sheaffers,
I have to be careful because a quick movement will spray the desk with
ink. My latest acquisition is from New
York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art. It is
a 45 gram heavyweight with an Elizabethan armor exterior, a kind of novelty
purchase but I am hoping it will also be a good working instrument. One day, I want to get the classic Montblanc
fountain pen, but for now, those are out of my price range.
I chose the Exacompta
notebook to test out first, and immediately loved the feel of the paper. Hypergraphia is the compulsion to write and
write and write. It is a mental illness
often present in patients with epilepsy, bipolar disorder, or
schizophrenia. I don’t think I fall into
any of those categories but since my notebooks arrived, I’ve been decidedly
hypergraphic. I just love the feel of
the nib sliding across the page, and I’ll find any excuse to write. What am I writing?
Well, while paging
through back issues of The Times Literary Supplement (TLS), I found a review from 2012 reminding me of a French
author I read years ago whom I love:
Annie Ernaux. Her many slim,
intense volumes are part of a genre in which she specializes: ecrire
la vie, or life writing. In his
essay, Michael Sheringham says that life writing “has become not only a handy
catch-all for what were previously considered discrete genres, but also the
emblem of perceived affinities between different ways of capturing the warp and
weft of lived experience, and of grasping how the various dimensions of a life
‘hang together,’ as Wilhelm Dilthey famously put it.” Ernaux’s work crosses a number of genres, including
“autobiography, biography, essays, history, confessions, diaries and travel
narratives…” says Sheringham.
She is not the first
writer to utilize this form. Sheringham
mentions Rousseau, Stendhal, and Chateaubriand; Andre Gide and Jean-Paul Sartre
(my hero!); Marguerite Duras (another French writer I deeply admire) and Alain
Robbe-Grillet for whom the term “autofictional” was coined. Sheringham describes Ernaux’s work in detail.
“The text is set out in chapterless
blocks of print, usually a page or so in length but sometimes consisting of a
single sentence, with the spacing between the units also varying in extent. Description and figurative embellishment are
avoided (there are few similes or metaphors); sentences are short and usually
tersely declarative; enumerations are frequent, as are comments on register and
rationale. The result is an appealing
mixture of the prosaic and the poetic…”
A term that surfaces
frequently with this kind of writing is ethnography, or autoethnography. This kind of writing uses personal experience
and reflection to explore political, cultural or sociological issues. Although Ernaux often writes about extremely
personal issues like her relationship with her parents, her marriage, an
illegal abortion she had in 1963, and her mother’s descent into Alzheimer’s,
the writing is inclusive and enlightening, and soulful, like a secret conversation
between confidantes. She explores the
human condition and the experience of being alive through a personal lens, but
the insights connect with readers and their experiences, as evidenced by her
popularity, not only in her native France, but in other countries and languages
as well.
To counteract possibly
falling into narcissism and navel-gazing in this kind of writing, I have days
where I do not allow myself to use the personal pronouns. I watch, observe and describe people and
places. I am a fly on the wall. I write about issues. I explore spiritual and philosophical
ideas. I continue to use journal writing
in my classes, and students, after becoming acclimated to the process, embrace
it and often come in with their own topic suggestions for the day. It is practicing the craft of writing, of
capturing what is in the mind and putting it down on paper coherently and
concisely. Like working out a muscle,
regular writing practice makes the skill stronger and more reliable.
So with all the
digital tools and 21st century technology, I am drawn back in time
to the broad-nibbed fountain pen and high quality paper in a notebook with a
cloth-and-hand-sewn binding. The pen is
mightier than the sword; in a pinch, one could defend himself against an attack
with a quick stab of the fountain pen.
If what Joan Didion says is true—“We tell ourselves stories in order to
live”—life writing is not just hypergraphia or narcissism. It is an act of survival, a way of processing
the big world, and to improve the craft of writing.
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