“I usually write at night. I always keep my whiskey within reach.”
— Faulkner
*slides glass of whiskey over*
There. That one’s on the house.
Fact: writers drink.
Every writer drinks. Total boozemonkeys to the last. Sure, you say, “But I don’t drink,” except, you probably do. You go to sleep, fugue out, and your writer hindbrain takes over — it’s like flinging open the cage door and letting out an enraged, deranged orangutan. Just because you don’t consciously drink doesn’t mean your crazy orangutan soul isn’t up at 3AM, dousing himself in the mini-bottle of tequila you unknowingly hid in the Holy Bible. So, don’t tell me the story that you don’t drink. Next you’ll try to tell me you have a mannequin for sale that only comes alive at night, when I’m alone with her in a department store.
Man, I’d so bang that mannequin.
What were we talking about?
Right. Writers. Drinky-drinky. You drink. You don’t drink, then you might not be a real writer. Being a real writer isn’t about how much you write in a day or how many books you’ve published. It’s about how big your liver is. Your liver doesn’t look like a lumpy kickball, then you and me, we’re not on the same page.
I get two comments frequently here about this site. One, “You sure do use a lot of profanity.” Well, I’m sorry. Profanity is fun. Profanity is a circus of language where the clowns are all insane and the elephant just stepped on a trapeze artist and something somewhere is on fire. Two, “You sure do talk about drinking.” Well, I’m sorry about that, too. We writers drink, and we like to talk about drinking, and we like to talk about drinking while drinking. It’s just our thing. Deal with it. And drink this while you’re at it.
You want to know why? You want some deeper instruction on the booze-sponge that is the penmonkey?
*clink*
Here goes.
Wistful Poetic Romance
Hemingway’s daiquiri. Faulkner’s mint julep. Stephenie Meyer’s “no-no juice.”
Okay, I’m not really sure about that last one. Point is, writing and drinking have long been paired together, arms locked in a poetic tangle — we envision the writer by his typewriter, a glass of Scotch in one hand, an elephant gun in the other. The whisky lights a peat fire in his belly, sends smoke signals of bright and bitter brine to his head, fills the chambers of his mind with the fermented bullets of inspiration.
It’s absinthe and poetry, brandy and prose, a lovable drunkenness leading to the potency of fiction.
Of course, the reality hits home when it’s 10:30 in the morning and we’re sauced on boxed wine, idly wondering when we got vomit in our own hair (it’s been long enough that it crusted over, a crispy bile-caked cradle-cap). Later we’ll look back at the work we wrote during that time (“Is fluvasham a word? Is this a grocery list? Funions? Really?”) and recognize that the romance and inspiration we so dearly sought is as empty as the wine box we’re presently using as a foot-rest.
Because Other Writers Do It
You know how like, there’s a state-bird? “It’s Iowa! Our state-bird is the one-eyed caviling corn grackle!” Well, if the state of Writerdom had a state-bird, it would be the whiskey-sodden rum-warbler.
Try this experiment: go to a genre convention or writer’s conference, wait till… well, it’d be optimistic to say 5pm, but let’s go with that, and then ask around to try to suss out where the writers are. Seriously, don’t even bother. Because I know where they are. They’re like elephants and tigers and flamingos who have found the one fucking watering hole in 1000 miles of Kalahari hell. Hint: They’re at the bar, dipshit. Drinking. They might not have money for food, but by a good goddamn they certainly have money to wet their writerly whistles. Where did you think you would find them? The library? The health food store? Okay, sure, you might find them at a pet store holding turtle races or playing mind games with ferrets, but that’s just because they spent all their allotted booze money.
You want to hang out with writers, you go where writers drink. And if you don’t drink with ’em, they will sense that you’re different. And like rats who smell an imposter, they will nibble you to bloody ribbons.
Because Holy Fucking Shit, The First Draft, That’s Why
That first draft can be a beast. I’m constantly in search of a good metaphor for what writing a first draft of anything long-form is like, but for now, let’s just go with “drowning in a sea of bees.”
So we get to feeling like, dang, I could really use a little something to take the edge off, you know? Something to dampen the misery of endless stings. We might try, I dunno, stretching, or a cup of tea, or a few bites of chocolate. And that’ll tide us over to the 20% mark, but somewhere along the way we need a life preserver to keep us afloat. We need a goddamn drink. (Well, frankly, we probably need an insidious mix of black tar heroin, methamphetamines, and ayahuasca — we can vacuum the roof, write a bestseller, space out with machine elves, then battle the gods of Xibalba over a game of severed-head-basketball. Thankfully, those things are difficult to procure. Unless you know an Inca.)
One gin and tonic might keep us afloat. Two gin and tonics eases the coming of the first draft, a kind of chemo-spiritual pelvic widener to help birth this story-baby. Seven gin and tonics and we end up soiling ourselves and drawing pictures of boobs on our computer monitors in permanent marker. Or we end up writing The Da Vinci Code. To-MAY-toe, to-MAH-toe.
Still, you drink, you feel 100 feet tall and bulletproof. Stephen King ain’t got nothing on you. I mean, except the fact he’s lucid and doesn’t suffer blackouts that require him to wear a diaper.
Celebrate Good Times, Come On
“I just finished the book! Time for some wine.”
“I just sold a story! Time for some wine.”
“I just got through a particularly rough chapter. Time for some wine!”
“I just got halfway through a sentence. Wine wine wine wine wine.” *drunken pirouettes*
Eventually we end up in a piano crate under an overpass with a three-legged incontinent terrier named “Steve,” and we tell passersby how we “just finished that novel,” and they’re all like, “Sure, whatever, homeless-person-who-smells-like-Maneshewitz-wine-run-through-the-urinary-tract-of-a-diabetic-raccoon.” And we wave our manuscript at them. And by manuscript, I mean “genitals.”
Aww, Sad-Face Need Boozytime
The opposite end of the spectrum arrives. Hey, rejection. Hey, book’s not selling. Hey, a bad review. Time to drown your sorrows in booze the way one might drown squirrels in a rusty washtub! Die, sorrows! Die!
It seems like a good idea until you remember the idea that alcohol can serve as a depressant. Then you end up on the lawn with your laptop, yelling at some rejection letter or negative review. “You don’t know me. You don’t know shit about shit about — urp — shit, buster. I wrote my fugging heart out of my butt for you and this is what I get? I’mma genie! Genial. Genius. That’s it. You shut up. Quit lookin’ at me, possum.”
The Bottle Muse And Her Lugubrious Liquor-Fed Lubrications
We get stoppered up, our word-fluids corked up and bricked off like the poor fucker in Cask of Amontillado and we suffer that most mythical of conditions, the bloated beast known as “Writer’s Block.” And so, to answer one myth we turn to another myth by seeking our Muse, and in seeking our Muse we figure, hey, screw it, why not throw a third axis of mythic deliciousness in for good measure? Thus we seek to conjure the Muse in the vapor of our own boozy ruminations, guzzling some manner of alcoholic spirit to stir the metaphorical (and thus entirely unreal) spirits that purportedly guide our writing lives and have power over our own mental blocks.
It rarely works as intended. Oh, it provides lubrication, all right. We end up inspired. We find ourselves inspired to eat a box of microwave taquitos and drunk-dial a passel of exes before kneeling down and praying before the Porcelain Temple of the Technicolor Hymn. It’s just, y’know, the one thing it didn’t help with was putting words on paper. But at least we get a good story out of it.
Because Holy Fucking Shit, The Final Draft, That’s Why
You hit a point where it’s like, I have these 80 billion copy-edits, I have to cut limbs off this baby before anybody will adopt it, and I have to do it all on deadline. Daddy needs some vodka.
The story goes that Hemingway said to write drink, but edit sober, but man does that feel counter-intuitive, right? Editing is like surgery. And you wouldn’t go into surgery without anesthetic, would you?
Once again, however, there exists that cruel line. A drink or two might make the process more palatable, but a baker’s dozen and, whoo boy. Before you know it you’re slurring made-up racial slurs at your own manuscript, and in a sudden sweeping rage you highlight 20,000 words right in the middle and — *click!* — delete it, and then just to be sure it’s dead, you salt the earth by erasing all your backup copies and shattering your external hard drive with a croquet mallet.
It’s The Only Way The Demons Will Stop Jabbering
I’ll just leave that one there without comment. Do with it as you will.
SHUT UP QUIT SPEAKING YOUR INFERNAL POETRY IN MY EAR TUBES GRAAAAAAFRGBLE THE STORIES ARE TRAPPED INSIDE MY HEAD LIKE A GOURD FILLED WITH SPIDERS
Uhhh. I mean, what? Nothing.
Sauce Up, Writer Folk
So, what do you drink, writer-types? What’s your favorite drink? Even better — favorite drinking story?
And yes, for the record, awooga, awooga, disclaimers: I am not an alcoholic, you should not be an alcoholic, and writing is not made better or more magical by drinking. This is just a funny post (with maybe a hint of truth to it) about how writers are so frequently drinkers. So put down that oak cask with the squiggly drinking straw shoved in its bunghole. And get back to work.
“Alcohol is like love,” he said. “The first kiss is magic, the second is intimate, the third is routine. After that you take the girl’s clothes off.”
— Raymond Chandler
Amanda says:
Haha so if i say no Mr. Wendig i honest to god don’t drink when i’m writing then i’m a sleepwalking alcoholic? Guess that would explain why i woke up one morning after taking a shower and found that portions of my hair on one side had been snipped about 5 inches. Guess that’s where the vomit dried and unconscious me needed to hide the evidence before i became conscious again? heheh
Ah, if only i really were joking.
But in all seriousness, music and caffeine. That’s what gets me through.
May 3, 2011 — 12:35 AM
Patrick O'Duffy says:
It may shock you to learn this, Monsieur Wendeeg, but I too like an occasional tipple. No more than a medicinal sherry or a teaspoon of port after dinner, mind you.
…okay, fine, I drink like a goddamn fish.
But at some point, possibly at the point where I started getting old, I stopped writing better/faster/more after a few beers or bourbons, and started writing slower/stupider/even less motivatedly. Now I have to use moderation when I’m on a deadline, and godfuckingdamnit does that annoy me.
Because yes, writers are supposed to drink. It’s good for us.
—
Patrick
May 3, 2011 — 2:28 AM
Hillary Monahan says:
We drink because how the fuck else do you tolerate the WAITING associated with the industry? Waiting to hear back from an agent, waiting for their edits, waiting for editors while on submission, waiting on acquisitions, etc.
Waiting. Forever.
May 3, 2011 — 4:26 AM
Sparky says:
Wine Mr Wendig. The finest wines available for under $10 per bottle. Which oddly enough can actually yield some rather drinkable sweet wines.
Either that or vodka and redbull. All the caffeine to keep me going and the booze to make me stop taking myself so seriously. I mean come on self, the first draft is never a best seller, have a drink and start writing.
Drinking stories: well the first time I drank I let a frat boy control the booze. This lead to him spiking my rum and coke until it was just rum. Almost a fifth of Sailor Jerry’s. Among other things we learned that:
I will urinate in public if I need to.
I have a countdown timer before alcohol hits the system, so I can drink until that point then suddenly go from buzzed to smashed.
Dry heaving isn’t fun.
My first thought upon waking is “Where’s my book/kindle”
Never let a frat boy control the booze.
I can never drink rum again.
Alternatively: A house mate once got so drunk we passed out. So I convinced two skinny drunks to help me (who was sober) move his entire mattress, with him on it, into our shared kitchen. We even moved his alarm clock, rubbish bin and glass of water. He was quite confused the next morning.
May 3, 2011 — 5:27 AM
Anne Lyle says:
I confess I no longer drink and write at the same time – the booze makes me sleepy and unfocused. However I’m totally with you on the celebrate/commiserate cycle – the non-writing bits of being a writer are frankly far more stressful than the writing!
And yeah, writers in the bar. That’s where I spent the whole of Sunday at EasterCon. Unfortunately not drunk, as the prices were astronomical, but still…
As for favourite drink, it depends. Late nights in the convention bar, it’s hard to beat a good single malt, but I’ll settle for a G&T the rest of the time (ideally, Bombay Sapphire and Fevertree, as per my tweet). Or red wine with food. Any food. (Except oysters, which require champagne. Mmmm, oysters…) Sorry, where was I?
Yeah, alcohol. Crap for inspiration, but a necessary part of the writer lifestyle.
May 3, 2011 — 6:52 AM
Josin says:
Nope. I don’t drink – I can’t even stand the smell of most liquor. I have no issues with other people drinking, though. I’d just rather not throw up on them.
btw — if writers are in the bar at 5pm, it’s because the agents got there at 4. 😛
May 3, 2011 — 7:07 AM
angie Arcangioli says:
Oh you lush! Just wait till the doc says your Gamma-GT is supposed to be less than 50 and it’s 98 dear. I think you should lay off at least a month until we can get another blood test and then we’ll see if that is why the cholesterol is high too.
May 3, 2011 — 7:36 AM
Bobby Cooper says:
Sam Adams and Funyuns (your mention of Funions has me craving the holiest of snack chips). It also has the nice side effect of creating deadly burps that scare the normal people away from my office so I can write.
May 3, 2011 — 8:01 AM
Ali says:
Oh, sweet mother of coffee — this was hilarious.
I do like a glass of wine. The other night, I had the most perfect mojito, which was made with the excuse: there are SO many mint leaves. They can’t just sit there.
Yeah, that was a little flimsy. But still. Delicious.
Every writer I know drinks. Then again, most people I know do. Not three bottles a wine a night, because that way leads to bad things — but I don’t think I know anyone who doesn’t keep alcohol in the house.
But I don’t often drink and write, unless it’s a single glass of wine. Beyond that, and all I want to do is sleep, watch television, or make bad choices (like phone calls). I’m kind of a lightweight.
It’s always interesting to me to find out what people reach for first. Me, if I’m out? Margarita. Home? Wine, or some kind of mixed drink I found on the internet. (Bless the internet.) I know some who only drink wine or champange. Others, whisky or beer.
It’s fascinating.
May 3, 2011 — 8:11 AM
Lindsay Mawson says:
First, let me say this. I can always count on you for my morning laugh.
I can’t drink when I write. I sometimes grab a beer if I’m writing later in the day, but honestly, I feel some strange guilt if I write while drinking. Probably because I know I won’t do my best work that way. Though, quite often I am tempted to drink something stronger to see if I can actually be more creative. Never works.
The drinking for me comes after writing. That’s where I forget that I just spend 12 hours glued to a chair writing down stupid words that may never make it out of my computer, where I forget that I must be anti-social to do what I do… And give me anything. I’ll drink whatever you put in my hands. Maybe not arsenic, but you get the point.
May 3, 2011 — 8:39 AM
Megan says:
I *wish* I could drink. Because I’m a writer, and that’s what they do. But I can only occasionally manage a Jameson’s and soda, or a margarita (still trying to perfect the perfect mojito.) I can’t stand beer or wine, but I love the pretty liquor bottles…I love mixed drinks, the combinations of the alcohols, the fun names, the different glasses. I love all the tools of mixing drinks. I just can never really manage to drink more than one, really really slowly…
May 3, 2011 — 8:55 AM
Kate Haggard says:
I guess I should drink more. Or less. I don’t know, you’re sending a lot of mixed messages here Chuckles.
Tell you a secret? I don’t drink much anymore. In college I was known as “The Tank” because, well … Use your imagination. My liver wasn’t just pickled, it was 100 proof. Then I slowly fell away from the sauce and I’m now at the point where I only have the occasional beer (or, lately, a glass of plum wine (because OMG it tastes like fruit juice!)). Naturually I don’t drink while writing because I usually write from 10-ish AM through 3-ish PM.
Though, tell you another secret? I’m craving a mint julep like nobody’s business.
May 3, 2011 — 8:57 AM
Stoney says:
You realize that you just proved SMeyer can’t be a real writer because she doesn’t drink, right? *starts a slow clap* Who knew it would be that easy…
Also, I’m fairly certain that I’m 74% liver, so I guess I’m a writer after all! Or I’m a liver transplant recipient to be, either/or.
It’s not morning unless Mama has some “sparkle” in her juice, you feel me? I need help.
Currently the drinks are: mojitos (it’s finally warm out!) ‘ritas (duh), RED WINE (never white), a bit of the bubbly, tequila, something with vodka in it, all of that and a straw and mattress under the bushes. It’s not sad if I wake up smiling. True, that smile is frozen there from the spittle on my cheeks, but it’s still a smile.
May 3, 2011 — 9:10 AM
Josh says:
I am in dire need of TuB gin after reading this. Dear God, do I need a drink…
May 3, 2011 — 9:13 AM
Scott Roche says:
Beer and not that crap that comes out of the BMC breweries. If it’s not at least 5% ABV it doesn’t pass these lips (generally). The nice thing about beer is I can drink one while I write and it doesn’t impair me. They also tend to be cheaper than liquor. Now at cons… That’s another story and no I’m not telling.
May 3, 2011 — 9:20 AM
David Niall Wilson says:
I came here because someone said there would be drinks…
Maybe we write because we drink…it might just be leaking back out…
Probably not though.
Probably just thirsty.
May 3, 2011 — 9:21 AM
James Knevitt says:
I am a simple man with simple pleasures, so from day-to-day it’s beer all the way.
however, if I’m trying to get in the right frame of mind, and then it’s daddy’s old friend gin.
Daddy needs his medicine, you see.
May 3, 2011 — 9:25 AM
James Knevitt says:
Oh, and Long Island Iced Teas. Lots and lots of Long Islands.
(I can hear my liver screaming now. Shut up, or you’ll get more of the same!)
May 3, 2011 — 9:26 AM
Marko Kloos says:
I’m a writer and full-time parent of two preschoolers. They recently built a new NH State Liquor Store in the next town, and there’s a gold plaque with my name on it at the entrance.
May 3, 2011 — 9:34 AM
John the Great says:
I agree with this post though I would like to add that I’ve had to cut back on my alcoholic consumption considerably. It’s due to dietary reasons but also because of depression. I don’t like to be depressed when I drink because I turn into an (even more so) whiny mess and it really doesn’t help my mood.
May 3, 2011 — 9:54 AM
midnightblooms says:
wine at first when the words flow like … wine. *headdesk*
gin and tonic when I edit and see all the sappy similes.
May 3, 2011 — 10:00 AM
Ben Kirby says:
[Sob, sniff…]
[shuffles feet, dejectedly…]
This:
http://warnerkirby.blogs.com/clintonaut/2011/03/its-five-oclock-somewhere-drinking-and-the-culture-of-writing-and-politics.html
[…quietly downloads application for McDonalds…. wordlessly shuffles years of collected stories and essays and puts them in a low, dusty drawer…. gets out a ginger ale…
[sigh…]
May 3, 2011 — 10:10 AM
Redleg says:
Sweet, sweet Old Crow.
May 3, 2011 — 10:13 AM
Tim Dedopulos says:
Unfortunately for me, I can’t drink any more. I’m on arthritis meds that nobble the liver; if I drink too, my blood cell count falls through the floor and then I go yellow and die. Which sucks.
But I do remember seeing a very persuasive discussion, by a (dry) alcoholic writer, who pointed out that male writers drink to seek an outlet for the emotions that, as writers, they can’t help but dredge up, but, as men, they cannot deal with. He provided some strong arguments and back-up. So, I guess a case of “Feelings! Dammit, I’m a _man_! WHERE’S MY SCOTCH AND MY SHOTGUN?”
May 3, 2011 — 10:22 AM
terribleminds says:
@Tim: That might be a part of it, but I know plenty of the lady writer drinkers. But yeah. Shotguns.
@Ben: Damn, fatty liver? I am sorry to hear of this, but glad to hear you’re in good health otherwise.
@John: Well, see, that’s the thing, innit? The joke of the post is that writing and drinking are two acts that go together often but probably shouldn’t. At least, not outside moderation.
— c.
May 3, 2011 — 10:27 AM
Darlene Underdahl says:
“Candy is dandy, but liquor is quicker.” I think that applies all over the place. Try not to do anything you’ll regret in the morning. And if you do… beard the fuck on.
May 3, 2011 — 10:37 AM
Greg Stolze says:
In all seriousness, there’s one explanation for writerly alcoholism that seems to hold a lot of water. It’s not that writers crave booze: It’s that alcoholics find writing to be a job that coddles their drinking. Editors don’t care if you were three in the bag as long as you hit your deadline. Any prose you fuck up drunk, you can fix in the edit before anyone sees it: Try THAT doing brain surgery or driving a school bus.
-G.
Also: Gin+tonic in the summer, whiskey, brandy or aquavit in the winter, beer and red wine filling in the corners. Also a fair amount of thick, sweet, syrupy liqueurs added to coffee whenever I get that chill in my bones.
May 3, 2011 — 10:40 AM
Laura Anne Gilman says:
How much do I drink? I wrote an entire trilogy about wine, that’s how much I drink.
(no, really)
Look, I gave up smoking, and I eat healthily, and go to the gym regularly… the booze _stays_.
May 3, 2011 — 11:06 AM
Stephen Blackmoore says:
I’m drinking whatever you’re buying.
May 3, 2011 — 11:12 AM
terribleminds says:
“I’m drinking whatever you’re buying.”
The mark (the maker’s mark?) if a true writer, indeed.
— c.
May 3, 2011 — 11:37 AM
neomaxiezoomdweebie says:
Mojitos,white and black Russians,martinis,whiskey-all types,red and white wine,sangrias
May 3, 2011 — 11:36 AM
Kristen says:
I know I’m a writer because…
When I read “Because Holy Fucking Shit, The First Draft, That’s Why,” I was actually expecting a description of how satisfying and heavenly the first daily sip of beer tastes.
Oops.
May 3, 2011 — 11:38 AM
C. Margery Kempe says:
Um, well, there’s a drink named after one of my characters (Chastity Flame) — I guess that’s an indication. And yeah, to shut up the voices in my head has to be reason number one. Number two is how else would I have a chance to kibbitz with my fellow writers if I weren’t in the bar?
May 3, 2011 — 11:43 AM
M. Hutfles says:
Not to make light of a funny post, but… Elizabeth Gilbert does a great TED talk on creativity/inspiration and the impossible things expected of artist of all stripes. Also that there are ways of thinking about inspiration that may not require such… chemical excesses.
http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/elizabeth_gilbert_on_genius.html
Plus I can barely afford my drinking habit anymore 😉 sour beers like lambics, sweet wines like muscats and froofroo cocktails make the bank account sad.
May 3, 2011 — 11:49 AM
TheBeerLady says:
Ahh, I have apparently found, then, the Holy Grail of writerdom. I write about drinking. Well, OK, in a technical sense, I write about cocktails, but seriously, why make a cocktail if you’re not going to drink it? I want to write, therefore I must make the cocktail, following which I must drink the cocktail, after which I can immortalize the experience on paper. Well, OK, as thousands of bytes of information.
Damn, it’s just like that circle of life. But without the annoying singing animals.
May 3, 2011 — 11:52 AM
Heather Greye says:
For a writer’s conference, I donated an “inspiration box” for the raffle. Along with the usually plotting notebooks and idea generators, I included mini bottles of absinthe, scotch and whiskey. Because writers, you know, drink.
I also included a copy of Hemingway & Bailey’s Bartending Guide to Great American Writers. More proof that writers like their liquor.
May 3, 2011 — 11:59 AM
Wrenn says:
A group of writers don’t drink any more or less than the average population, that I have seen. they don’t drink any more or less as any other stress filled career selection, in my personal experience. Some drink more, some less, some not at all.
(I a) live with a published author and b) I’ve been a investment banker, and c) I’ve been involved with event planning for both of the aforementioned type, as well as others.)
May 3, 2011 — 12:11 PM
Rod says:
Can extensive pot smoking qualify you as a real writer?
May 3, 2011 — 12:28 PM
Marlan says:
Rum and Beer mostly, but not together because that’s gross. I like a good Hefe now and then until I get fat. Then it’s back to rum and 5-hour energy drinks.
PS – I fucking love profanity.
May 3, 2011 — 12:33 PM
Lynne Connolly says:
Linnea “What do you mean, you’ve never had a Long Island Iced Tea?” Sinclair sent me here.
I live in the UK, and I write romance. The RNA has a conference once a year, usually at a university. At Leicester University you could hear them thinking, “Sweet ladies who write kissy-kissy books, a bottle of sherry and half a dozen bottles of white wine will do for them.” We drank the bar dry in half an hour. They sent out for more, in more realistic quantities. We drank that, too.
I love single malt, but because I live here, the price is affordable. And red wine. And vodka, though I tend to take it neat over ice.
May 3, 2011 — 12:39 PM
J.S. Wayne says:
This should be required reading for anyone who writes, knows someone who writes, or has ever even tangentially MET someone who writes. Eleven in the morning and I’m thinking it’s Miller Time! Before I go back to trying to exorcise angels from my skull.
(Yeah, I said exorcise angels. If you DON’T exorcise them, they’re impossible!)
My favorite tipples are Budweiser, cinnamon whiskey, and Chivas Regal. But, alas, sometimes I have to go on the dreaded and much-maligned wagon. Then it’s Mountain Dew in quantities that would kill a small child.
May 3, 2011 — 12:43 PM
Pinkwood says:
I think ‘no-no juice’ means something different where I come from! 😀
I love gin. And wine. And rum. And beer. And most cocktails. And that lemon flavoured floor cleaner.
I was going to post about one or two of the many hilarious misadventures which I have found myself swept up in whilst under the influence, but then I realised it just makes me sound like I have a problem!
May 3, 2011 — 12:48 PM
Athena McCormick says:
Mostly I like a bottle of cider (I’m living in the UK now and the booze is SO CHEAP) or a G&T when I’m writing (prior to the spontaneous formation of my lactose intollerance, Baily’s in hot chocolate was a winter favourite), nothing when I edit.
I wrote Aigaion Girl sober to see if I could. I could, so now I’m back to my old tricks.
The idea that alcoholics writing rather than writers drinking is interesting… but I don’t know; a lot of wirters I know drink, but I wouldn’t consider any of them to have a drinking problem – but it is an interesting theory.
May 3, 2011 — 1:03 PM
Jennifer Leeland says:
Brilliant. And so true.
Whiskey and Diet Coke is my preferred poison. I have to bookmark this to show my husband. He seems to think I SHOULDN’T drink. Whatever. LOL!!!
May 3, 2011 — 1:28 PM
Tess Anderson says:
Scotch, Scotch and more Scotch. Single Malt please – and only from islands like Skye or Islay. Once had a bet with a boyfriend that I could write poetry while drunk – after most of a bottle sat down and wrote an Ode to Scotch – not great poetry but it won me my bet. I’ve found, sadly, that although one carefully measured shot sipped through and evening of editing will help any more and I start turning up the music and dancing instead. Sigh! The buggery first draft can be a different story… god I hate middles.
May 3, 2011 — 1:48 PM
Anny says:
I drink because it quiets the voices inside my head…
My drink of choice is good vodka or Remy Martin.
May 3, 2011 — 2:13 PM
Noah Brand says:
Not quite sure how I wandered in here, but must add my voice to the faintly slurred concord of agreement. Scotch, for me. Good scotch when I can afford it, cheap scotch otherwise. Living in Beertopia, Oregon also comes in handy, but I find scotch easiest for medicinally maintaining that biochemical sweet spot where the words come easily, but they’re all still correctly spelled.
May 3, 2011 — 2:42 PM
Andrew says:
An aspiring writer might look at the lives of Ernest Hemingway and Tennessee Williams and agree that there is a “price of genius.” In his heyday, Joe Eszterhas drank a bottle of Jack Daniels everyday… along with so many lines of cocaine… and so many bottles of beer… and so many packs of cigarettes. And yes, Eszterhas wrote BASIC INSTINCT within two weeks and sold the script shortly thereafter for $3 million. But, in reality, drinking, drugs, promiscuity and the like are just distracting crutches. Carl Jung made a valid statement when he wrote that the artistic complex is NOT a neurosis, but a freestanding complex in the unconscious. Lawrence Kubie’s Neurotic Distortion of the Creative Process makes the case that, for a writer (or any other creative person) self-destructive antisocial behavior is neither a requirement nor an excuse for creativity. I think the real lesson is: Be careful about what habits you marry to your writing process. If a writer cannot write without drinking… he is in deep sh*t. Because that is an unsustainable process. The documentary OVERNIGHT more than suggests that things could have turned out very differently for Troy Duffy… if he gave up drinking after selling his script. After Joe Eszterhas gave up his substance abuses, he has sold one or two scripts in the last 10 or so years. That is a far cry from the 1990s, when he was averaging two script sales and year and being paid big $$$ for high concepts he wrote on a table cloth. The “price of genius” is not drinking, drugs, promiscuity and the like. “Genius is the art of taking infinite pains.” For a writer… that means a lot of writing and lot more rewriting.
May 3, 2011 — 3:08 PM
Jamie Beckectt says:
I learned young that drunk dialing was a bad idea. It just doesn’t work out well, no matter how good an idea it might seem at the time. As an extension of that hard and fast policy, I don’t write drunk either. Not even after one glass of wine. Because for all I know I’m a lightweight, and I’ll end up sending an editor something that suggests his or her lineage is questionable, their significant other bears a striking resemblance to livestock, or that I hated writing this piece.
Oops – where is that un-send key? Damn. Too late. I lost another outlet, and another check.
Yeah, drinking and writing might be expensive for me. So I draw the line. I don’t do it. Ever!
May 3, 2011 — 3:12 PM
Nathan Crowder says:
I have enough booze stashed at my house that non-writer friends can be a little surprised. Hey, a fella likes to have options, you know? Like gin (Tanqueray Rangpur or Aviation) with Jones Green Apple soda, or Royal Crown with Crown Royal (which I call a “Mirror/Mirror”), or Sauza Silver with Prickly Pear Lemonade, or Fireball whiskey with cola.
But let’s be honest – if it has booze in it, I’ll take a whack at it just to make sure.
It’s the professional thing to do.
May 3, 2011 — 3:37 PM
CMStewart says:
You think it’s a myth until you live it.
May 3, 2011 — 4:09 PM
D. Travis North says:
Don’t all creative types drink?
I’m a Manhattan man myself. Rye if you have it, though I’ll settle for bourbon. And God help you if you forget the bitters. It’s all about the bitters.
Or I’ve been known to drink Irish. But I do that shit straight. Can’t do Manhattans with Irish.
May 3, 2011 — 4:34 PM