posted by [identity profile] banbury.livejournal.com at 09:42pm on 29/01/2008
Is it possible to read your original stories on the net?
I'm unable to plan any of my stories, even articles. When i put down plan first then i'm losing interest in writing, cause i already know what it all about :-))
 
posted by [identity profile] gillyp.livejournal.com at 10:30pm on 29/01/2008
I don't have anything on the net, no - I've never seen any reason to post them, tbh -

I find the plan is only ever a rough guide. Once I start writing, the thing takes on a life of its own and often goes in all kinds of directions I never planned.

By articles do you mean journalism? I always planned those meticulously just because of the constraints on length, par length and structure.
 
posted by [identity profile] banbury.livejournal.com at 11:18pm on 29/01/2008
Yes, journalism, though I like to think of myself as a researcher rather than journalist. I have to know the purpot and main ideas of an article when I begin to write it but i can't detail the structure of it before i write the first variant, I don't know why but i begin to understand how each part combines with others only then. Not very productive way of doing it :-)
 
posted by [identity profile] gillyp.livejournal.com at 06:48am on 30/01/2008
Whatever works for you is always good and everyone has their own ways of doing things. I could never figure out how the old guys managed, banging a story straight out on to a typewriter - it's a totally different way of thinking and one I never got yo grips with.

I always found, being, by nature, a long writer, that I had to structure articles very firmly and know exactly what points I was going to make at set points of the story or else I was just - lost. Especially if they involved hefty editing of lengthy interviews. I used to get in the most appalling messes sometimes.

Columns, though were pure stream-of-consciousness things for me and always my favourite things to write.

Who do you work for (if you don't mind me asking?) I used to mostly write for The Economist and the UK press; did a lot of freelancing for the glossies - Marie Claire, Cigar Aficionado, Natural Health, stuff like that.
 
posted by [identity profile] banbury.livejournal.com at 03:10pm on 30/01/2008
It's okay, I just think you don't know these editions, cause I live and work in Russia.

I'd begun to write for journals for parents when I was at the university, i was interested in fairy tales then and had written about it and other stuff, i'd even had a year-length project of 'The history of fashion for children' :-)
Later I've wrote several years for the "Moscow news" monthly appendix (is it right word?) and for one of the travels magasines, always as a freelancer.

Now I write for popular scientific journal "Science and Life" though quite lazy, i'm actually lazy writer, sometimes it takes me even month or two to compose article (if i have no deadline). I tried to find a way to one of the glossies, but here it's all work through personal connections and my connections lays in different fields :-)

But mostly i work as a researcher (and rarely author or editor) for TV programms, scientific and documentary, with my father who is well-known in Russia author of documentary and scientific popular films ant Tv programms.
 
posted by [identity profile] gillyp.livejournal.com at 09:27pm on 30/01/2008
Your work sounds really interesting. I used to work as a fixer for documentary makers when I was in Cuba. It was always my favourite part of the work.
 
posted by [identity profile] banbury.livejournal.com at 09:47pm on 30/01/2008
Yes, it's always interesting. We are finishing now big project - history of genetics, I've spent two years reading and translating a lot of literature on it from English and rummaging libraries and it was even fun, i found so many fascinating stories and persons to read about. I was totally in love with Tomas Hunt Morgan for some time :-)

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