Blogcritic of the Month, December 2006: Richard Marcus - Page 4

Part of: Blogcritic of the Month

I really enjoy the research aspect of writing a story, and if I'm not careful will sometimes get lost for a couple of hours just wandering around the web following a trail. In some ways it's like putting together the pieces of a novel, you find out the plot and the major characters involved in the action. The only things that stop me from going deeper and deeper into the story – researching all the individuals involved, etc. — are common sense and time constraints.

I spent years accumulating all sorts of bits and pieces of knowledge about subjects ranging from sports to the times of the crusades and honestly never really found much of a purpose for it. Now in the past few years that I've begun writing on an almost full-time basis, all those little bits and pieces are being put to use. It's like everything I have done up until now has been in preparation for what I'm doing, at least that's what I like to tell myself when I wonder what ever possessed me to become a writer.

If you had to restrict yourself to one type of writing (not that we'd want you to, mind you), which area would you be most content to work in, and why?

What a mean and nasty question. But actually it's not as hard as you think because I could make a case for writing about almost any subject under the Culture heading. That's cheating, I know, but I'd hate to have to choose to write in only one category because I would get bored so quickly.

I'm also tempted to say books and writing, but there would come a point where that would start to drive me crazy, because there's only so many books you can review without your brain snapping, and believe it or not, I do get bored talking about my own writing after a while.

So I would choose the Culture category because it is the most open-ended of the headings. In fact I'd say aside from reviews I would think that the Culture category is the one I write the most for anyway. It seems that the topics, even political ones, that interest me the most have to do with how we work as a society and the rules that we impose on each other in attempts to control the way we interact, and that's definitely culture-related.

In Culture I can also have fun with stuff like new age and other gobbledy-gook and write satires about the strange things people do to avoid doing anything constructive about themselves. That of course leads to all the "sincere sharing" that passes for the exchange of information on Oprah – until, of course, it's found out to be all lies (well, only the once).

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Article Author: Lisa McKay

Lisa McKay is Blogcritics' Executive Editor. At BC she can usually be found hanging out in the film section. She recently started food blogging at Will Kill for Food.

In her spare time, she watches movies, listens to music, reads, and caters to the whims of two spoiled cats. …

Visit Lisa McKay's author pageLisa McKay's Blog

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Article comments

  • 1 - Connie Phillips

    Dec 05, 2006 at 4:47 pm

    Congratulations Richard! Thank you for sharing with us via the interview. Nice write-up as usual, Lisa.

  • 2 - Matthew T. Sussman

    Dec 05, 2006 at 7:55 pm

    Uh oh. Back to back Canucks. We really need to plan this better.

  • 3 - SonnyD

    Dec 05, 2006 at 10:38 pm

    Yea, Richard! Great write-up, great interview.

  • 4 - Vikk Simmons

    Dec 05, 2006 at 11:53 pm

    Congratulations. I really enjoyed reading about you, your writing, and your process Keep up the good work.

  • 5 - Richard Marcus

    Dec 06, 2006 at 1:33 am

    Holleee

    do I really sound like that pompus beady canuck...

    Thank you very much Lisa and all you other editor types for the honour. Considering all the folk who write on this site and have quite amazing things to say all the time it's enough to make a fella's head swell.

    That is until his next article is put on hold for being sensless gibberish. Oh well that gives me about a day or two to revel in this.

    Thank you once again,

    cheers

    Richard Marcus

  • 6 - Donnie Marler

    Dec 06, 2006 at 8:44 am

    Richard,
    Congratulations! Well deserved!

  • 7 - Pico

    Dec 06, 2006 at 9:37 am

    You write good stuff. Keep 'um coming, Richard.

    -P

  • 8 - Kathy Jones

    Dec 06, 2006 at 8:12 pm

    The interview was wonderful reading and the collection of articles is inspiring. I especially appreciated your comment, Richard, that what you found most difficult is this:"getting the words on the page to be as exciting as they sound in my head." Really resonated with my experience, and your persistence has paid off, as evidenced in the quality of your work. Congrats!

  • 9 - Al Barger

    Dec 07, 2006 at 11:43 pm

    Why, some of my best friends are Canadians...

    Look, all decent patriotic Americans naturally hate beady-eyed Canucks with their heads so full of lies. Brother Marcus, however, does not indulge in the head full of lies part. He will tend to make somewhat different value judgments than me in some political areas (ie he tends to be more "liberal"), but he's highly respectful of facts and strives to seek truth rather than simply win arguments.

    So then, as Canadians go, Richard Marcus ain't half bad. He's one of the good ones.

  • 10 - STM

    Dec 08, 2006 at 12:03 am

    "Look, all decent patriotic Americans naturally hate beady-eyed Canucks."


    Never got over having your blurters kicked from here to kingdom and back in the War of 1812, eh?

    Time to bloody well forget that, Al, old boy, and move on.

  • 11 - Al Barger

    Dec 08, 2006 at 12:48 am

    STM, keep monkeying with US Americans, and we'll execute Terence and Philip again.

    Canadians are already skating on thin ice as it is. If you read the fine print, the Patriot Act actually outlaws Canada. That whole country is just one Celine Dion album away from being the new Iraq.

  • 12 - STM

    Dec 08, 2006 at 1:09 am

    Mate, I have often heard Canada described as "America's hat".

    However, I have a copy of Mercator's correctional map of the world, which since north and south are nothing more than human inventions and no-one really knows what is top and what is bottom, has Australia and New Zealand at the top of the world.

    The US of course is then below the equator, with Canada below that. Using this map, it is no longer America's hat, but America's undies.

    I'm sure they prefer being the hat.

  • 13 - Elvira Black

    Dec 09, 2006 at 1:20 pm

    Lisa and Richard:

    What an incredible piece. Lisa, you somehow encompassed the essence of Richard in your brief intro, including the formidable depth and scope of his work. And Richard, I felt like you were inside my head (or vice versa) as I was reading the interview--and if I read you right, that's one of the essential elements of what every writer strives for. You've got it in spades. Congrats!

  • 14 - Duck

    Dec 10, 2006 at 6:31 pm

    How nice of Canada to allow Indigenous peoples use of their own land. How of them.

    Seems racist to me when oil companies can go on Indigenous (Crown? Who wers the crown?) Land. Receive hugh tax breaks and I am sure lax environmental controls. Why can these companies sell or do whatever they want?

  • 15 - STM

    Dec 10, 2006 at 11:52 pm

    Ah, it's good to see that land owned by the Government in Canada is still called Crown Land (just like in Australia).

    Much of it wasn't used by indenigenous people in the sense that we understand land ownership anyway. Therein lies the problem. A conundrum now being left to others to sort out, just like in the US, with varying degrees of success. Although mostly not.

  • 16 - crushkill

    Dec 16, 2006 at 5:22 pm

    I really like how he loves talking about himself!

  • 17 - DukeDeMondo

    Dec 18, 2006 at 5:17 pm

    Richard, congratulations Good Sir, and that interview was glorious also. It does the site no end of good to have folks like yourself on here. And what a lovely man, also.

  • 18 - alessandro nicolo

    Dec 31, 2006 at 5:32 pm

    Yeah, like the Inuit were going to extract the oil with their kakivak's. No offense. Congrats, Mr. Marcus. Montreal Canadiens - good man.

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