the washington post
wednesday, august
28
,
2019
EZ
2
BY BARBARA KINGSOLVER
To know me, you wouldn’t
guess I’m carrying on a secret life.
I go to my desk early and stay late,
making about as little noise as a
human can make while earning a
living. I’m a novelist by trade, and
in recent years also a screenwrit-
er, adapting my work to film or
television. I enjoy this new busi-
ness that marries my brain with
those of others who are skilled in
different arts, in service of beauti-
ful, accessible creations. Screen-
writing is like and unlike writing
novels: Compelling plot and char-
acters are equally crucial to page
and screen. Tension and economy
are appreciated by readers, de-
manded by viewers.
The one currency of literature
that’s of little use in screenwriting
is language. A screenplay, like a
recipe, is a set of instructions for
other creators. Apart from craft-
ed dialogue, the words them-
selves disappear. In a novel, they
last forever, so it’s worth spend-
ing weeks plumbing the right
language for drawing readers
into a scene, let’s say, on the banks
of the Congo River. The quality of
light on water, the insect whine of
the forest — I have to paint all this
into your mind using brush-
strokes of words. In a screenplay,
I need just four: EXT. CONGO
RIVER — MORNING. I may offer
specifics, but directors and de-
signers like their space. I learned
this after turning in some lyrical
early efforts and getting told in
script meetings: “Barbara, dar-
ling, less is more.”
It’s fascinating work, but lately,
something else is pulling me back
to my computer late at night. I get
carried away in such guilty plea-
sure that if my husband walks in
unexpectedly, I’m prone to click
off my screen as if hiding an
online affair or a gaming addic-
tion.
But it’s neither. I’m writing
poetry. I hadn’t realized how bad-
ly I’ve missed language, the
weight of words, their rhythms
and tastes on the tongue. Oh, I
love telling a story: beginning,
middle, end. But there’s delight in
telling a moment: the world
turned over by a sudden encoun-
ter of unacquainted thoughts.
When a poet tells me that hope
has feathers, or that life is a
loaded gun propped in the corner,
or that time holds me green and
dying though I sing in my chains
like the sea, my pulse races. Get
me up there on that tightrope
where I can write my own sun
barefooting cartwheels over the
grass. Words are heady beings
when they dance.
And because no two are exactly
alike, their partnerships are par-
ticular. Every sentence-in-prog-
ress has a hole in its heart, like a
lonely soul scouring eHarmony
for her one and only. Writing
poetry feels like that longing ful-
filled, a line at a time. Reading it
feels that way, too. Poetry books
are small by design because po-
etry is meant to be sipped slowly,
with the doors locked. It’s not
steak and potatoes. It is absinthe.
I wrote little poems as a child,
and as a college science major I
wrote them in the margins of my
textbooks. As a busy young moth-
er and journalist, then novelist, I
wrote them in the margins of my
deadlines. But now the dripping
faucet has become an open hy-
drant that wakes me night and
day, flooding me with words I try
to hold like water in my hands
until I can sneak off to my next
assignation with drafting, caress-
ing and completing a poem.
I’ve always been word-smitten.
I remember the first one I ever
read (“orange”) pulled from a
page of newsprint by force of will
and a craving for the nourish-
ment I’d watched adults sucking
from that source. I can still feel
how the word cracked open into
my brain, spilling out color and
taste. I’ve hardly put down the
printed page since, except to pro-
duce my own. I collect dictionar-
ies, try out new languages for fun
and thank my stars I was born to
read and write in this one. Eng-
lish is uniquely twice-blessed,
thanks to the Norman conquest
that brought Latinate influence
into the Anglo-Saxon tradition.
That’s how we ended up with
both Germanic and Romantic
words for all our important
things. Not interchangeable
words, but unique ones. Latin
came in from the top down, so our
language family’s two sides carry
different connotations of class
and aspiration. Think of chicken
vs. poultry; kids vs. descendants;
workshop vs. laboratory. Free-
dom vs. liberty. This rich linguis-
tic DNA gives us more and subtler
choices than most of us ever think
to use.
Certainly, it’s wasted on a line
like: “Exterior, Congo River —
Morning.” It’s no surprise that
some years of nuance deprivation
would drive me to this. I’m keep-
ing my day job. (All poets have
them.) But at 3 a.m. you’ll find me
with Emily Dickinson and Dylan
Thomas egging me on as I consid-
er whether “fixed” or “mended”
feels more trustworthy, whether
“distant” is harder to reach than
“faraway.” How the dinner party
of words I’ve organized is getting
along, and which one I should
seat at the end of a line. Whether
it will serve there as an anchor or
a detonation. This tryst is irresist-
ible. If Dylan and Emily or their
ilk ever show up at your house,
listen, I’m telling you. Lock the
door. Give them a go.
[email protected]
Barbara Kingsolver’s many novels
include “The Poisonwood Bible,”
which she is adapting as a television
miniseries. Her next book, coming in
2020, is a poetry collection.
Reigniting a love affair with words
Since a screenwriting stint, Barbara Kingsolver has been harboring a secret.
STEVEN HOPP
Author Barbara Kingsolver will discuss her work on the Main Stage at 6 p.m.
3 Main Stage
4 Fiction
5 Genre Fiction; History &
Biography
6-7 How to get the most out of your
festival experience
8 Understanding Our World
9 Poetry; International
10 Science; Children’s Green Stage
11 Children’s Purple Stage
12 Cartoon by Raina Telgemeier;
Teen Stage
INSIDE
WALTER E.
WASHINGTON
CONVENTION
K ST. CENTER
N ST.
NEW YORK AVE.
9TH ST.7TH ST.
M ST.
L ST.
2019 National
Book Festival
Aug. 31, Walter E. Washington Convention Center
Sources: National Book Festival, Maps4News THE WASHINGTON POST
1/4 MILE
Washington
Post
LEVEL THREE – SOUTH
LEVEL TWO – NORTH LEVEL TWO – SOUTH
STREET LEVEL – NORTH STREET LEVEL – SOUTH
LOWER LEVEL
L Street
Bridge
Va. D.C.
Md.
Detail
Event room Book sales and sponsors
Book signing
Book
sales
Hall A
Children’s
Green
stage
West Salon
Genre Fiction
East Salon
Fiction
Room 150
Library of
Congress stage
Room 152
International
Room 145
Poetry & Prose
Hall D
Main stage
Room 147
Science
Hall B
Children’s
Purple stage
Room 202
Teens
Ballroom A
Unserstanding
Our World
Ballroom BC
History &
Biography
COVER ILLUSTRATION BY ADRIANA PICKER FOR THE WASHINGTON POST