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Charlie Walters Shane McKnight Charlie Walters Shane McKnight

Motivation and Thrilling Places

By Charlie Walters


Self help books abound. They teach us to have the discipline and energy to write. Our energy may come from coffee or exercise, or like Stephen King, a long walk. While all such books and podcasts and whatever are useful, they don’t really help us writers to motivate ourselves. We may have the discipline to sit in the chair, but then what?

Passion in writing and the desire to write are elusive. Like the muse, they can mean all sorts of things. They can come in the guise of a person or a time in history.  For me, thrilling places have always helped me get into the mood to write.  How do you lose yourself in your writing, the pages being written by the minute?  The answer, find a great place, get inspired by beauty or danger, and get writing.  

Let’s start with a place known to many writers; New York City.  Like my hometown of Washington, DC, the big apple has a romance to it.  The colors and forms of the Museum of Modern Art, or the history and culture of almost every restaurant or building come to mind.  You can probably name a few other ways the city, any major city really, inspires the imagination. Great structures have been built and lives, infamous and famous, are in the fabric of the city.

The city is flavored by a sense of being alive, but also killing. Plenty and deprivation live together on New York streets.  There is no better oasis from the pain and ambition of NYC then the Rose Reading Room. Located in the Schwarzman Building, third floor, one can be transported to a writer’s and a researcher’s paradise. This elegant room was used by authors and journalists like Norman Mailer.  

Look up and see lightly pink clouds hiding cherubs.  The sun beams in daylight to excite the soul.  It’s two blocks long.  Chandeliers hang far above the rectangle tables of beautifully stained wood.  They are on marble floors.  Request a book at the desk.  Stop and read the one you brought as you wait.  A trolly brings your book on a twenty minute journey.  Your individual lamp lights your space.  It’s almost heaven.  The only place like it, in my experience, is the Wilson Library at the University of North Carolina.  You’ll find yourself wondering why tourists are resting on unstable café chairs in Bryant Park.

Like the Rose Reading Room, Georgetown’s cobbled streets in Washington, DC get me in the mood to write. I start out at Bridge Street Books, finding something like Truman Copote, In Cold Blood. I cozy into the alcoves of this small two story shop.  DC bookshops are great for finding that unusual history or international book. Next, I proceed up the stone path to a restaurant like Clyde’s, where you can get decent food and a stiff drink, if that’s your thing. I advise going to the back bar, at Clyde’s, or anywhere in Georgetown. 

Adam’s Morgan is another great neighborhood in DC, but Georgetown has the vibe of power and play, both great for writing.  Sit in the back. Take it all in with a slow sipping Pinot Noir. Think about the filming of The Exorcist or the Kennedy’s home a few blocks up. JFK moved to Georgetown as a freshman congressman in 1947.  He proposed to Jackie at Martin’s Tavern on Wisconsin Avenue. These are a couple of the places that thrill me and drive me to write. For you it might be a New York diner or a DC rooftop bar, but I encourage you to find your own thrilling place of motivation.  Experience helps us write about our character’s lives.  Thrill yourself first by finding that special place.  If you’re at a loss, try one of mine.

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