The pros and cons of dating a writer.

Date:

Share post:


August 21, 2024, 1:08pm

Archaeologists estimate that humans invented writing around 3200 B.C.E. Archaeologists also estimate that soon after, around 3190 B.C.E., humans began wondering if it’s a bad idea to date a writer.

“Should I ask out Ninimma? Even though she’s a cuneiform writer?” asked our Sumerian ancestors. And still today, the same questions haunt us.

Writers can be intelligent and interesting, sure, but they can also often be found cowering in garrets. Not to mention that dating a writer can get very messy. What to do? Hopefully this list of pros and cons can help you or a friend, as we get closer to cuffing season.

* * *

Pro: Writers tend to be fairly self-sufficient, and are content to be alone with their thoughts.

Con: Solitude isn’t optional: they’ll need a lot of time alone to work, i.e. stare out of windows and moan.

Pro: You’ll look cool at parties introducing your partner as a writer. People perk up when they get to ask writers things like, “What are you working on?” and “What’s your take on the Oxford comma?” and “Will you read my terrible manuscript?”

Con: Writers hate these questions.

Pro: The birthday cards you get from a writer will be very touching.

Con: You won’t be able to attend a wedding without hearing a writer’s catty and judgmental notes on wedding speeches and vows.

Pro: You’ll never want for great suggestions for what book to read next.

Con: You’re going to have to hear a lot about the book a writer recommends to you, and there will be many follow-up conversations about it.

Pro: Writers can help you polish your work emails into beautiful little gems.

Con: Writers’ income is often embarrassingly low—unless you date the wealthy and continually in-print Clive Cussler.

Con: Novelist and prolific shipwreck discoverer Clive Cussler died in 2020.

Pro: Writers want to understand the world, people, and relationships, and have a curiosity that makes them fascinating companions. Writers are observant, pointing out little things that will make day-to-day life richer and more interesting.

Con: A writer will always notice when you have something in your teeth, but will forget to tell you about it because they’ve drifted off in thought, wondering if that bit of stuck broccoli is a metaphor or representative of something about your character.

Pro: It can be inspiring to be around someone so dedicated to their craft.

Con: It can be depressing to be around someone so dedicated to toiling in obscurity.

Pro: Writers tend to have strong beliefs and opinions, and are passionate about their taste and their views.

Con: If you date a writer who is too online, they will get you way too embroiled in petty and obscure lit world dramas. You’ll become deeply invested in who is negatively reviewing whom, and will be able to spot Pamela Paul subtweets from a mile away.

Pro: Writers have a gift for magical thinking (complimentary).

Con: Writers have a gift for magical thinking (derogatory).

Pro: A lot of writers have very nice stationary, and if you’re very nice, they may let you borrow some of it—emphasis on “may.”

Con: Writers can be obsessive, and are liable to do things like try to write a whole book without using the letter “E” or spend months in granular and intensive research about postwar Italian typewriters.

Pro: Aw, they might write something about you!

Con: Oh god, they might write something about you.



Source link

Nicole Lambert
Nicole Lambert
Nicole Lamber is a news writer for LinkDaddy News. She writes about arts, entertainment, lifestyle, and home news. Nicole has been a journalist for years and loves to write about what's going on in the world.

Recent posts

Related articles

Meet the writer who added “lol” to the end of every sentence of In Search of Lost Time.

September 17, 2024, 1:05pm Have you ever wondered what would happen if Proust’s seven-volume classic In Search of...

Am I supposed to read all this? On spending time with Jenny Holzer’s word art.

September 17, 2024, 10:00am There’s a scene in Vinson Cunningham’s debut novel, Great Expectations, when a preternaturally jaded...

Lit Hub Daily: September 17, 2024

The Best of the Literary Internet, Every Day ...

The Ultimate Fall 2024 Reading List

It’s Big Book Season again, and you know what...

Rumaan Alam on Creating a Fictional World of the One Percent

Rumaan Alam’s captivating, artfully nuanced fourth novel, Entitlement, revolves around the growing distance between the one percent...

For Tony Tulathimutte Book Piles Are “Metaphysical Constructs”

Tony Tulathimutte’s novel, Rejection, is available now from William Morrow, so we asked him a few questions...

Timothy Snyder on How the Collapse of the Soviet Union Took America By Surprise

In the language of physics, a bell that hangs on a post on a farm is in...

A Quiet Giant: How Indonesia Paved the Way for Liberation Struggles Worldwide

Translated by David Colmer and David McKay.Article continues after advertisement It was the loudest explosion I’d ever heard....