"Book of Lives, a Memoir of Sorts" by Margaret Atwood: a Writer's Multiplicity (post 1)
“I wish I could have a body double in my real life, I thought. It would be so handy. Of course, I do have one. Every writer does. The body double appears as soon as you start writing. How could it be otherwise? There’s the daily you, and then there’s the other person who does the actual writing. They aren’t the same. But in my case, there are more than two. There are lots…
'The one doing the writing has access to everything in the memory bank. The one doing the living might have some idea of what the writing self has been up to, but less than you’d think…
“Is writing a trance state”…Not quite, you can break off…Yet the sensation of something taking over can’t be ignored; too many writers have testified to it. Flow state, inspiration, characters seizing the initiative from their authors…these kinds of testimonies are too numerous to be dismissed…” (1, p. xiv-xix).
1. Margaret Atwood. Book of Lives, a Memoir of Sorts. New York, Doubleday, 2025, 599 pages.