Transcript
Karen Abbott: A lot of procrastinating. No. But no, when I was writing this book I listened to Ragtime every morning. I can’t listen to music when I write. I need silence, but I liked to use it as a primer and get myself back in the time period. Particularly with Ragtime, it’s such a distinctive time that immediately it transports you back into, you know, a century earlier. So that was really helpful to me. And I try to . . . I have to unplug the Internet a lot, or else I start surfing like the superficial at Gawker and all these gossip web sites. So I’ll unplug that. And I need to, you know, set daily goals pretty much because the writing group is . . . We check in with each other at night. And if we don’t reach a certain word goal we’re not allowed to sort of . . . At night we have like a wine toast. And if we don’t reach our word goal, we’re excluded from that wine toast and you get ignored for that night. So it’s sort of an incentive. You get to hang out at night only if you get . . . you achieve your word count for the day, so . . .
Recorded On: 1/22/08
What is your creative process?
Abbott listens to music to get on the right frequency.
March 12, 2008 | In Arts & Culture
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