Today’s blog may end up sounding like a graduation speech.
Blame the research. As frequently happens, while looking for something else, I
ran across a fact that distracted me. The result of this detour was that…
We can all lay claim to genius.
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The word “genius” has its roots in ancient Latin. The Romans
believed that a deity or spirit watched over each person. Sometimes a spirit also protected a particular place, usually the family residence. In my mind, I
picture a beneficent Dobby the house elf. I think it’s more accurate to the
word origins, however, to equate the deity with what many refer to as their
guardian angel. Because the connection between spirit and individual began at a
person’s birth, it was called a “genius,” from the Latin verb gignere,
meaning ‘to give birth or bring forth’. We more commonly see this Latin root of
beginning in words like “genesis” and “genetic”.
The “genius” guided individuals to live into their destiny, be
that common or exalted. Of course, we mostly have references to those who were
led to greatness.
In the 18th Century, the word "genius" took on its
contemporary meaning. Genius, with its divine element, got conflated with ingenium,
a related Latin word for innate talent. A natural, god-given talent became our
word, genius.
With the publication of The Devil’s Kitchen and The
Hidden River last year, book clubs occasionally invite me to come talk to
them. Invariably, there are questions from readers about how to write a book.
Never forget you’re a genius, I tell them. It’s a line that plays well with
listeners. I then explain the classical roots. The etymology suggests that we
all have a unique nature. I encourage them to tell their story, tapping into
that perspective. They don’t need to set a book in a national park; that’s where
my Dobby led me. Instead, they should go to that place where they are guided.
I hope the advice lands; it has personal resonance. A decade
ago, I wrote a historical mystery. It was good enough to procure an agent, but
it never found a home. While the book was being shopped, my agent recommended
that I write another book. This is, I believe, the agent’s answer to all life’s
problems—write another book. The one she proposed had several market-driven
elements. I wrote it, but I don’t know that my heart was ever in it. Perhaps
that was reflected in the prose. To paraphrase David Hume, it fell dead-born,
without reaching such distinction as even to excite a murmur…”
In the interim between submission and ultimate surrender, I
wrote the draft of a book that eventually became The Devil’s Kitchen. It
was a story I wanted to tell, possibly felt destined to write. The writing was
more fun and the results more satisfying. Me and my genius and I got the job
done.
The satisfying feeling of writing the story you want to tell
suggests another derivation from that old Latin root. ‘Genial’, the word
meaning friendly or cheerful, arises from that innate or inborn sense of
genius.
If you’ve set a writing
goal as a New Year’s resolution, I hope you’re still working toward it.
Remember you’re a genius. Go toward that innate destiny, and may it make you
cheerful.
Until next time.
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With the publication of The Devil’s Kitchen and The Hidden River last year, book clubs occasionally invite me to come talk to them blox fruits
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