I can’t read while I write

Which is a shame because my to-be-read pile is growing every day, filled with intriguing titles, but I’m working on book seven in my PIP Inc. Mysteries series which means no reading until it’s finished. You might wonder why I can’t read when I write. I’m a very undisciplined writer so it’s not like I sit at my computer tapping away all day long. Why, then, can’t I read when I take a break from writing?

I consider my particular writing and reading impairment as the result of being a good realtor for almost twenty-five years. Realtors are taught to mimic clients talking speed, body language especially use of hands, emotions, and language as much as possible. Classes are taught in how to do those things. I dropped out after the first class because I’m a natural mime, always have been. That helped me as a real estate agent and probably has helped in other situations, too, but as a writer it’s a problem for me.

Many cozy mysteries are written in first person. I don’t do that. I write in third person. But if I’m reading a good cozy written in first person, I start to slip into that style of writing which makes a mess of the POV and my manuscript in progress.

There are other distractions, too. Dialogue is a potential problem. After fifty pages of another writer’s dialogue, my characters begin to mimic their phraseology and start to take on their use of language. Mime time again.

My storyline suffers when I read while writing. I do a short psychological profile and background history for most of my characters before they head for their places on my pages. I do use a timeline because I need to know who knew what when or I get lost having, for example, a clue about when a character who had taken her hearing aids out in a noisy restaurant, put them back in (critically important in What Lucy Heard, for example) and why her dinner companion didn’t know she had.

My outlines are a lot more flexible, though. Before starting a book, I know who the killer is, how and why the murder victim was killed, how the story will begin and how it will end, and have characters I want to introduce to move the story forward, but there’s a great deal of flexibility in how all those pieces come together. If I read while writing, the mimic in me invariably spots a clever plot twist in the work I’m reading and wants to incorporate it in what I’m writing, which as you can imagine, makes a mess of my plot. I do wonder if it’s just me or if other writers have the same problems?

Until my book is finished and off to the editor, I’m sorry Nicole, Vinnie, Mary, Robin, Valerie, Claire, Genevive, Richard, and Verlin. Your books will have to wait a bit longer to be read, but I do know how important reviews are so I promise to leave one as soon as I finish reading your book.  It’s the least I can do for keeping you waiting while I write.

5 thoughts on “ I can’t read while I write

  1. I haven’t read a mystery book in years! Just kidding. I don’t read while I’m writing either, can’t do it.

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  2. I avoid fiction when I’m writing fiction, and stick with nonfiction and sometimes just the newspapers and magazines. I’m not a mimic as you are, but I listen deeply and worry that what I hear others say will show up in my characters’ dialogue or behavior. Writers are sponges for interesting material.

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  3. I read, I just read in a different genre. If I’m writing my Hawke novels or Spotted Pony Casino mystery, I read cozy or historical mysteries. If I’m writing a cozy mystery, I read a police procedural or general mystery. But I don’t read any of the other game warden mysteries. I don’t want my Hawke books to be like any of them. I have only read the first book in each series to know what they are like, so I can converse with readers who have read them. Good post!

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  4. I can’t do it, either. My editor friend can divide herself and often reads “for pleasure.” I’m pretty sure if I were an editor, that part of me would never shut up.

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