By Madeline
Sharples
At this point in my life by all rights I should be
retired. I’ve just turned seventy-nine, and no where does it say I need to keep
sitting at my computer every day and write. But I do sit there – usually from
ten in the morning until about two in the afternoon. Sometimes I’ll even go
back for more later in the day.
I got into this habit in the early 2000s when I started
writing my memoir, Leaving the Hall Light On. That expanded to writing poetry,
essays for my blog and other people’s websites, and journaling.
By the time my memoir was published in 2011, I was
already working on my historical novel, Papa’s Shoes, which has just been released. And that’s not the end of it. I still
write poetry – I write at least one poem a week except in November and April
when I write a poem a day to meet the Writer’s Digest poetry editor’s
challenge. I journal every day, and I’m currently working on a new memoir.
Way back in 2010 during my frustration about not
finding a publisher for my memoir (it took me two years and sixty-eight queries
to finally sign a contract), I decided to take a UCLA Extension Writing
Workshop called How to Write Your First Novel. At that point I had an idea –
which turned into Papa’s Shoes – but
I had no idea how to write a novel. That workshop was a great help in getting
me started.
Although I didn’t have the same frustration in
finding a publisher for Papa’s Shoes,
I decided that once I completed it and started to send out queries to small
presses, it was time to start another writing project. I wasn’t sure I had
another book in me, but once I created an outline and began to write, I
realized I might even have two. The subject I picked was aging – a universal
theme I know about very well. As of now, I have finished the first draft,
though I feel I need to add a few more chapters. It’s not quite long enough to
qualify as a full-length memoir.
Back to the question of why don’t I just retire and
not even pursue these writing projects.
Maybe I do it out of habit or because I’m aging and
have to prove I still have enough faculties to keep going. Even more of a
reason is that writing helps keep me from wallowing in the grief I have felt
and still feel since the suicide death of my son in September 1999. I’ve said
many times that his loss turned into a gift – a writing gift – and I’m not
ready to throw that gift away yet.
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Madeline Sharples
worked for most of her professional life as a technical writer and editor,
grant writer, and proposal manager, she fell in love with poetry and creative
writing in grade school. She pursued her writing interests in high school while
studying journalism and writing for the high school newspaper, and she studied
journalism in college. However, she only began to fulfill her dream to be a
professional writer later in life. Madeline's memoir, Leaving the Hall Light On, is the
harrowing but ultimately uplifting tale about her son Paul's diagnosis with
bipolar disorder, through his suicide at her home, to the present day. It
details how Madeline, her husband, and younger son weathered every family's
worst nightmare. Madeline co-authored Blue-Collar Women: Trailblazing Women Take on Men-Only Jobs (New
Horizon Press, 1994) a book about women in nontraditional professions and
co-edited the poetry anthology, The Great
American Poetry Show, Volumes 1 (Muse Media, 2004) and 2 (2010). She
wrote the poems for The Emerging Goddess photography
book (Paul Blieden, photographer). Her poems have also appeared online and in
print magazines. Her articles have appeared in the Huffington Post, Naturally
Savvy, Aging Bodies, PsychAlive, Story Circle Network’s HerStories and One
Woman’s Day blogs, and the Memoir Network blog. I have appeared on panels at
writers’ conferences and have spoken about and read my work at book clubs, book
stores, libraries, churches, writing groups, and on the radio. She post about
writing on my website Choices and host authors on my website
who are marketing their books through the WOW! Women on Writing virtual book tours. Madeline is now a full-time writer and
is working on her next book, a novel, based in the 1920s. She and Bob, her
husband of 40+ years, live in Manhattan Beach, California, a small beach
community south of Los Angeles. Her website and social media links:
My website/blog My Facebook page1 My
Facebook page2 My Facebook
timeline My
Twitter page My Pinterest page Independent
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