“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
Elizabeth Newlin says:
I sense some condescension and mocking used here in connection with boxed wine. Fie on that mocking. I beseech thee, good sir, to show me another lovely boozy beverage that comes with it’s own spout and can be purchased for home consumption for under $15. There is none. Boxed wine rules.
May 3, 2011 — 4:36 PM
terribleminds says:
@Elizabeth:
No grump towards the boxed wine, only that it is a less than romantic beverage. One has a hard time imagining Hemingway sipping on a box of grape.
One important note: you can remove the wine bladder from the box, then retrofit a backpack to either dispense the wine or use a straw to sup on the wine as it sloshes around on your back.
So, uhh, there’s that.
— c.
May 3, 2011 — 4:38 PM
Neliza Drew says:
I have learned that if writing and drinking, some laptops are better suited to hold wine than others.
May 3, 2011 — 4:41 PM
Girl Friday says:
My favourite cocktail, the Espresso Martini, should really be renamed the Writer’s Delight – I mean, strong coffee and vodka, what could be better for cracking the back of that first draft?
May 3, 2011 — 5:17 PM
Brian Drake says:
I will confess that I wrote a portion of my newest manuscript, The Rogue Gentleman, completely bombed out of my mind (Bushmills–many shots of Bushmills. I killed half a bottle). I could not feel my tongue. But even drunk I have perfect penmanship (first drafts are long-hand) and it was quite entertaining to scribble those words while my head spun in circles.
But this is not routine, I assure you. It was a particularly bad night for reasons other than writing.
May 3, 2011 — 5:36 PM
Lenni says:
All true. Every word. XD
May 3, 2011 — 5:50 PM
Ryan Macklin says:
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.
HAHAHAHAHAHA
At NorWesCon I started BarCon early on Friday. I think around 2.
Well, early for some. I was too busy drinking my lunch to start earlier.
I think we held that table until at least 9pm.
– Ryan
May 3, 2011 — 6:56 PM
Namejodi says:
ack!!! I have spiders in my gourd and my therapist wants to cut them out with Prozac and the Maury show. Save me! I need caffeine. Alcohol can wait.
May 3, 2011 — 7:09 PM
Anthony Elmore says:
When the bales are stowed and the horses watered, I grab my favorite Star Trek Spock tumbler, fill it halfway with ice, then attempt to drown the ice to death with Wooford Reserve Kentucky bourbon.
Then the world becomes my coaster.
May 3, 2011 — 8:13 PM
Ashlee says:
You are clearly a genius, good sir, and I love your work. 😀
For me, it’s honey mead, although I did find a very nice sauvignon blanc while on vacation that I will need to track down… mm.
That said, without caffeine, I can barely muster the strength of will to even switch on the computer. It is a mean, cruel mistress, but I need her, yes I do.
~Ashlee
http://theDragonsHoard.bigcartel.com
facebook.com/TheDragonsHoard
May 3, 2011 — 8:19 PM
Julie says:
I have to disagree with your hypothesis – I think you should further qualify it. Disturbed writers drink to excess. Alcoholics can’t write for shit when they’re drunk. They shorten their lifespan and kill off their brain cells in the process.
I have to say I don’t see anything to recommend the process.
My recommendation would be don’t drink and write. And if you do, remember this: garbage in, garbage out.
Of course, this is just my opinion.
May 3, 2011 — 8:40 PM
Antone says:
Spoken like someone to meek to drink and write.
June 6, 2013 — 3:31 AM
Shawn Dalton-Smith says:
Grey Goose and cranberry juice. If I’m wrtiting a sex scene, I’ll have three. You’d be surprised what a heroine will do in bed when she’s drunk. Now There’s some hot stuff for ya!
May 3, 2011 — 9:56 PM
Jack Houser says:
I know I don’t *need* to drink to write successfully, but for me, I hit points in my stories where I feel like it needs to be a little punched up and I can’t quite get it right after multiple passes, so I turn to my liquid kami for guidance, wait for them to cast their buzzing spell on me, and I charge head-first into the prose like a bowled midget into ten pins. Then I step back, wait for the cartoon birds and stars to stop swirling around my head so I can read what I just typed, and more often than not, I go, “Huh. Yeah, that really does it. Why couldn’t I think of that when I was sober?” And then demon monkeys in my hair say, “To enforce the stereotype, asshat.” And I nod in agreement.
As for my weapon of choice, my bread-and-butter is rum & coke, but I always like to find that next weird spirit du jour. While browsing the boozemart, the demon monkeys in my hair point past my cheek and screech, “Cotton candy vodka? WTF? Oh, we HAVE to give THAT a whirl, boss…”
May 3, 2011 — 11:26 PM
Kat Richardson says:
Oh Chuck, you have ascended to my personal heaven–right next to Steve the Intergalactic Fruit Bat. (have a Dorito.) And I need a drink… ANOTHER drink. No wonder my first draft is staring at me like a barn full of demented and slightly recalcitrant owls… NOT ENOUGH BOOZE!
May 4, 2011 — 12:14 AM
Karin says:
It’s true, and the reason (or one of them) why pregnancy and breast-feeding has totally fugged up my writing schedule and creative genius.
May 4, 2011 — 7:31 AM
annaliterally says:
Well, I’m split. I caffeinate excessively with Lipton tea. Hot tea, iced, straight out of the box, whatever. Stand back, Momma needs her caffeine. As the day wears on, and my nerves get frazzled, I may start to add some Jack into the mix.
But if there’s a reason to celebrate, like a first draft, or a second draft, or I wrote a great line, or I thought about writing all day, and someone’s buying, I drink Long Islands. Or Jack. Or a Long Island with a shot of Jack, which is actually quite tasty.
I think I’ve mentioned this before, but Jack Daniel’s is responsible for about 95% of my blog hits. Thank you, Jack. I love you.
May 4, 2011 — 7:44 AM
Magnolia says:
The bread and butter work gets written sober. I need that job. It performs small miracles, like keeping a roof over my head and putting food in my stomach.
Anything I might theoretically enjoy writing (for a given value of enjoyment) is marinated in gin and sour defeat, or the occasional Stella if I’m feeling lowbrau.
May 4, 2011 — 9:19 AM
Zequeatta Jaques says:
Chuck, your post is LOL funny! Hmm…I think you were hitting the bottle a little bit when it was written?
May 4, 2011 — 9:22 AM
Phil Brody says:
Love this site & love this post. Cheers!
May 4, 2011 — 2:33 PM
Tracey Hansen says:
I started with only the finest of wines under $8.99 and now I just pour a shot of tequila into a bottle of diet citrus green tea. I call it The Writers Margarita.
May 4, 2011 — 2:52 PM
Tom Wisk says:
Sobriety is overrated. But if you gotta do it let the brain wander back to the bad old days when destroying gray cells with alcohol and THC seemed like a good idea. You can do it. You’re a writer. If you can make up stuff about things and people that don’t exist you can create the mindset that you had when wrote those first deathless words.
May 4, 2011 — 9:25 PM
AB says:
Just a little *nod* to Lynne Connolly; romance writers are probably the hardest drinking bunch you’ll ever run into. Seriously. If you don’t believe Lynne, go hit a bar during any romance writing con, and you’ll see them, drinking like mad, laughing like lunatics, playing some sort of “plot” drinking game (think I’ve Never). Yeah…uh….don’t ask.
Myself, I’m a girly-drink-drunk. Love those umbrella toting drinks, but I’m a moderate drinker. Mainly because I gotta be, what with being in charge of kids and all. But let me tell you, those monthly strawberry daiquiris, I write for those. I focus on having a reason to celebrate with my girly drink, and that helps move me forward.
May 4, 2011 — 11:54 PM
Connie Myres says:
Hilarius! I now know that I’m a real writer and there’s legitimate reasons for it…
May 5, 2011 — 8:17 AM
Chelley says:
Now, I really DON’T drink. But I do pop pills…that has to count for something.
May 5, 2011 — 1:07 PM
JCaddell says:
I’ll drink to that!
Great post!
May 6, 2011 — 11:02 AM
Janae says:
The first thing I thought of when reading this post was how much Joan Wilder drinks in Romancing the Stone. And I giggled like a loon.
And then I thought about how much Karina and I drink when we hang out with each other. And then I giggled some more. Which I really needed.
So I salute the fact that writers drink, and not only that, that writers also talk about drinking, laugh about drinking, commiserate about drinking, and are simply all around lushes.
May 6, 2011 — 2:10 PM
Apythia says:
Brilliant! And so true on so very many levels!
May 6, 2011 — 4:55 PM
Casz Brewster (aka whiskeychick) says:
Yesterday it was whiskey; today it is mimosa; tonight rum. Sunday is all about wine. I drink and I write. http://bit.ly/lpkRws #amwriting
May 7, 2011 — 9:21 PM
Jeb Blount says:
Three weeks from deadline on my 5th book. Hoooray Scotch!
May 11, 2011 — 9:42 AM
I'll never tell says:
oops – that sort of gave it away. I was so hoping none of this needed to be true. After all I wrote my Master’s Dissertation unaided…what are my choices here? I can be sober and ultimately homeless because god knows I’m unemployable. Or I can surrender and alienate every sober friend I have and ruin my health. I wish there was another way. I shouldn’t have to depend on anything to connect with the words! Or put another way, myself. I am tragically & simultaneously sad and relieved to surrender…
August 1, 2011 — 4:47 PM
I thought I was clever until I got to the email box says:
Then again, I tihnk Julie’s got it sorted out.
August 1, 2011 — 4:49 PM
Kevis Hendrickson says:
Nothing beats pounding whiskey or wine or gin or whatever alcoholic concoction is on hand when the Muse fails to do her thing. Old Crow, Jack Daniels, Cabernet Sauvignon, Mead, Beer, or Rum, I’ll take it all. Cause one thing’s for sure. Either I whoop the Muse or the Muse whoops me. And I ain’t down to get my butt whooped. Now where’s my bottle of Johnie Walker?
August 3, 2011 — 10:21 PM
Kevis Hendrickson says:
I think the real question is do you write because you drink? Or do you drink because you write? For me, I think I’ll quote Mr. Brewster above. I drink and I write. What more is there to say?
August 3, 2011 — 10:30 PM
Brandon Scott Fox says:
First off, gotta say great post and loving the Chandler quote at the end. If anybody knew the pluses and minuses of drinking more than Hemingway it was Chandler….Truth is, I drink more than I’d like. But, like you said, sometimes you just need it. At the end, at the beginning, in the middle…it strikes without warning. But truth be told I think you, me, and Hemingway are all better without it. Do we need it? Damn right we need it…but we’re probably better without it…then again…what the hell do I know? Someone give me a drink.
September 10, 2011 — 10:01 PM
Laura W. says:
“Stephanie Meyer’s no-no juice”
AHAHAHAHAHHA
*dies*
September 19, 2011 — 2:00 AM
Ana says:
Ha! Been thinking a while that it’s the only thing holding me back is sobriety.
Proost van Amsterdam meneer Wendig!
December 12, 2011 — 9:42 AM
Ryan Carter says:
I only drink geek beer. You know, root.
January 18, 2012 — 5:20 PM
BrandyGoat says:
I. I. I think I love you.
You’re funny.
February 5, 2012 — 1:31 PM
D.B Dean says:
I am not sure what came first, the drinking or the writing. Okay…I lied…..it was the drinking. No one looks at a writer pooring their soul out into a book with a large bottle of whiskey sitting next to them. But pull that same bottle out of your cubicle drawer and poor a shot or too and suddenly people are concerned and suggesting you attend meetings.
The truth is I am easily distracted by noise. I live in a house with three little boys and a husband who likes to share everything he see’s on TV, craigslist or ebay with me. The “hunny come look at this…” and “mommy, my brother just shanked me in Halo three…tell him not to shank me….” all night long makes it hard to think
When trying to write I am constantly pulled out of my world back into the real world by every sound and movement. Like a squirrel who has eaten a chocolate bar, I bounce around from limb to limb chattering at a high pitched and frantic rate until my heart explodes and I lay painting at the base of the tree, vunerable to every predator that happens to slink past.
A (one…errr three) glass(es) of jack daniels and coke…or a couple glasses/bottles of wine..create a buffer. I am now completey unaffected by my writing partner’s , “Bob Marley – the salamander”, beady eyes blinking at me from the book case next to my desk. I do not wonder if Bob needs more crickets. I stop worring if Captain and Tennille, our gold fish, need to have their filter changed. The boys fighting becomes mere background movement *unless someone starts bleeding or crying* and I can ignore Kali-girl’s big brown eyes and tell her to lie at my feet, I am not going to brush her right now.
I probalby should be on ADD medication…but Jack (or Jim or Johnny) work just fine. And honestly, my grammer, typos and spelling are awful when sober. My dyslexic tendencies to use words that sound alike (could, would, should, good, hood) intechangably happens when not drinking…so I actually write BETTER when I have had a few because at least I can focus and write.
It’s either a few drinks or I invest in duct tape and secure the boys to chairs in the living room…pretty sure CPS would frown on that.
I do love your blog. You write like I think, which probably means I need to A) see a shrink or B) have another drink. Thank you for your whit, intelligence and POV…when my corporate 9-5 gets me all twisted up, a refreshing skinny dip in penmonkey pond snaps right back into my perferred state of mind.
Tah
D.B. Dean – virgin penmoneky
February 16, 2012 — 12:37 PM
d b dean says:
The above typos are what happens when posting via iPhone at starbucks…plus I cant type worth shit. I am gonna need to find a GOOOOD editor.
February 16, 2012 — 1:24 PM
chuck chuck to the bin says:
Chuck. Let me be straightforward, you are a bad writer. Don’t get me wrong, in terms of pure mechanics you are passable, but your style and “I’m a writer, lookit me” persona are grating beyond belief. “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.” Firstly, your your metaphor reeks of trying too hard, and consequently fails at being funny. I picture you in a propeller hat sipping whatever rancid pisswater, stroking your purposefully-unkempt-for-that-edgy-rebel-funny-writer-look beard until words dribble out of it like cheeto crumbs, forming a sentence which causes you to bear your booze-fuming teeth in a hideously self-congratulatory smirk. I dont like you.
Now, my main gripe with you is you identifying yourself so ostentatiously as a writer. It smacks of being overly preoccupied with the image of being a writer rather than the act of writing itself. Your lackluster prose is endemic of this. “We writers liek to drenk ti is what we riters do. Here is a joke, laugh please. I am funny and a writer.” The prominence of your book About writing rather than any creative work of your own, I think, proves your focus on the idea of writing rather than the act of doing it well.
August 2, 2012 — 1:41 AM
terribleminds says:
Is that you, M. Chapman?
— c.
August 2, 2012 — 7:28 AM
Georgia says:
Well, darling, your metaphors aren’t even good enough to fail. I raise my glass of pisswater to your turgid self-contempt, sweet detractor! Please begin process of identifying yourself as a sad sack, because it’s only up from there xo
May 23, 2013 — 1:17 PM
chuck Chuck to the bin says:
No, Chapman goes after good artists.
August 2, 2012 — 3:23 PM