The Review Review
Abstract
What do you need to write? A pen and paper, for some people. Keyboard. You need a table or a lap or a drawing board. If you’re making an outline or storyboard, you need a wall to pin your notes on and watch them as they migrate. These objects and surfaces have to be secure, too. The worst fear is leaving a notebook open and losing pages to the wind. A writer is usually one hard drive crash away from total misery. But, looking more deeply, the writer’s craft requires space. And time. The combination of these, in the act of writing, translates to privacy.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s)
Recommended Citation
Foster, Claire Rudy
(2020)
"Beyond Privilege: Building a Writing Life When You Have No Room of Your Own,"
The Review Review: Vol. 1:
Iss.
2, Article 49.
DOI: 10.33972/trr.117
Available at:
https://repository.gonzaga.edu/trr/vol1/iss2/49
Included in
Creative Writing Commons, English Language and Literature Commons, Publishing Commons, Rhetoric and Composition Commons