Sally Bayley
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Sally Bayley
Blog Introduction

A Sentence Space: a Manifesto

A sentence is a settlement of parts, a happy arrangement — I write to settle myself — although my subject matter may disturb or challenge. I hope so. This blog is my play space. I also write to play: to make shapes, to produce images, make unexpected arrangements. I write to replenish my voice but also to pay attention: to focus, to adjust my lens. I write to find my subject and that takes a while. I have to play through several drafts and versions. Play is also work until I find that surprising alignments between words. This is also a space for whimsy, for dreaming, for opening up space — extra-territorial, moon-lit, sunlit, whatever she stumbles upon — a cracked door, an open room, a space full of toys. She beckons me in. Happenstance. Whimsy. Mood. A trail of thoughts. Writing is also thinking. It is speaking out loud: a form of address, an argument, rhetoric, a good arrangement with words.

Good syntax is elastic — it pings — I remember that game we used to play as children, cat’s cradle. Sometimes we played with thread and sometimes with elastic. I write to create shape and texture, to hear that ping, the release of energy. Writing is a way of recharging. Syntax is also a form of wiring and the wiring needs a lot of work, so I write and rewrite. I shape shift. Nothing stays still for long. A writer is a restless creature, pacing and pacing around the room, sleepless, her eyes closed, groping her way into other worlds. That famous sentence from Virginia Woolf’s To The Lighthouse describing the death of Mrs. Ramsay:

Mr. Ramsay, stumbling along a passage one dark morning, stretched his arms out, but Mrs. Ramsay having died rather suddenly the night before, his arms, though stretched out, remained empty.

Syntax squirming into life even in the face of Death, perhaps because of Death, and so she must squirm through a series of interrupted subordinate clauses which somehow reflects life interrupted — those arms outstretched, stretched out, his arms.

‘The poet, Stevie Smith at her typewriter’ by Suzie Hanna (from ‘The Blue from Heaven’ film)

‘The poet, Stevie Smith at her typewriter’ by Suzie Hanna (from ‘The Blue from Heaven’ film)

 

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I grew Miss Cull my character during the remote and lonely period of lockdown when the world fell into a social twilight.
Sally BayleyOctober 15, 2022
'Oh Time, Thou art too hard a knot for me to untie!' : How do you write up Time Passing? (A piece of life writing in a few jotted stanzas.)
Sally BayleyOctober 10, 2022
In the end is my beginning: or what happens when your character's life runs out?
Sally BayleyOctober 7, 2022
'Over your body the clouds go . . .' : Or Sylvia Plath Does not Confess to Anything
Sally BayleyOctober 5, 2022
Edith's Confession: 'You see, Inspector, it was a very ordinary day, a day like any other.'
Sally BayleyOctober 4, 2022
'. . . but they had each fallen into a dream.'
Sally BayleyOctober 3, 2022
What happens to us when we tell a lie? It has become so fashionable, so easy, there are so many ways these days.
Sally BayleyOctober 1, 2022
Monsters from the Deep: on Lying
Sally BayleySeptember 30, 2022
“Good sex is something fiction just can’t do — like dreams.” (Martin Amis). I disagree.
Sally BayleySeptember 20, 2022
How to write a lie? Keep it succinct. Don't elaborate. Curtail the cinema in your mind.
Sally BayleySeptember 15, 2022
I am writing a biography of extinction
Sally BayleySeptember 13, 2022
When writing of cruelty it is impossible not to recall ‘King Lear.’
Sally BayleySeptember 6, 2022
Her lips, when she does not speak or eat, are normally pressed together . . (Muriel Spark)
Sally BayleyAugust 18, 2022
'Dixie don't like him.' (The Ballad of Peckham Rye, Muriel Spark, 1960)
Sally BayleyAugust 16, 2022
Releasing the catch on your character, creating a second life, a new autobiography.
Sally BayleyJuly 12, 2022
Producing emotion: writing up the emotional life of characters through the awkward gap
Sally BayleyJuly 5, 2022
In that moment's flight between the picture and her canvas (Virginia Woolf, TO THE LIGHTHOUSE)
Sally BayleyJuly 3, 2022
Begin in media res . . . advice on how to unstick yourself --- the writer -- your character
Sally BayleyJuly 2, 2022
'It is all in the timing this living.' (Pond Life: A work in Progress -- like everything)
Sally BayleyJune 27, 2022
‘Edith was finding her pencil a less critical implement than her pen’ (POND LIFE).
Sally BayleyJune 25, 2022
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Contact Sally directly: sally.bayley@ell.ox.ac.uk

Or her agents at The Wylie Agency: Sarah Chalfant: SChalfant@wylieagency.com