Confessions of a Hired Gun: Being Bulletproof
Published August 30, 2006
There is no dearth of articles philosophizing the craft of writing. Unfortunately, at least 97 percent of them have absolutely nothing to do with the act of writing. Instead, the vast majority focus on the mysteries of the creative process, the sundry neuroses that inhibit writers, the unreasonable demands of markets and 99 other problems that attempt to explain and rationalize why mediocre writers aren't published, much less paid.
Why? Preaching to the choir is a hell of a lot simpler than converting the heathens.
I fall into the later category. I'm a freelance writer. I freely admit that every word I write is geared to a specific audience, and that audience changes with every new project. That doesn't mean I have no principles - it's merely a recognition that specific audiences read specific articles or stories geared to their specific tastes. Some would call me a writing whore ( in fact, some have) because I have no problem switching gears between fiction, criticism and copywriting. It's all the same to me - stringing words together is what I do. It's just the mindset that changes. If that makes me a whore, so be it.
I see it a bit differently. I prefer to think of myself as a hired gun. The qwertyuiop keyboard is my weapon of choice, words are my bullets and I never miss. That's the beauty of freelancing - I'm afforded the luxury of deciding who my clients are, and just as importantly, who my targets are. As with everything else in life, there's a trade-off. When you're not beholden to any one special interest, it's easy to become a thorn in the side of all special interests, however noble your intentions may be.
So how do you reconcile those conflicts? Do you wrestle with self-doubt and fears that you might actually piss off somebody? Or do you throw caution to whatever ill winds might come your way, and write what is exactly your gut is screaming for you to write?
There isn't a pat answer. There are, however, a couple of clues that serve you well regardless of the idiom in which you're writing. First, you have to realize that the universe is not hanging on your every word. Your audience could give a rat's ass about your desire to alter civilization with that book that's in your head and you will one day actually write. They could care less about your personal turmoils and neuroses. They want to be entertained and/or informed.
- Confessions of a Hired Gun: Being Bulletproof
- Published: August 30, 2006
- Type: Opinion
- Section: Books
- Filed Under: Books: The Writing Life
- Writer: Ray Ellis
- Ray Ellis's BC Writer page
- Ray Ellis's personal site
- Spread the Word
- Like this article?
- Email this
Save to del.icio.us



I am pleased to tell you this article is being featured in the Culture Focus today, August 31st, and tomorrow, September 1st.
Diana Hartman
Culture Editor