The Writing of Jack Remick
Jack Remick
As a writer approaches the visionary techniques of Late Style, art changes from exercises in the craft of massaging the Ego to the transformative language of the unconscious, the archetypes, the structural reality of myth.
Art is salvation ever more so in the Late Style which is that time when the artist, in silence, frees the mind from oppressive and expected cultural-historical restraints of form and content to unleash a newness that both confounds and instructs. Without art, we are members of a tribe of efficient killers. I am not a member of that tribe.
The Latest from Jack Remick
How Do You Start a Novel?
Note: For the NaNoWriMo writers who find your way here, Bob Ray has posted a "Tips for Surviving NaNoWriMo" on Bob and Jack's Writing Blog. Check it out.I get this question a lot when readers tear into one of my books. Blood, you can see, is built on an aleatory...
What’s a Plot Track?
Okay. A couple of readers want to know what a plot track is and how it works. You can run a plot track on an object, a symbol, a character, an action. In the examples below, all from Blood, I run the plot track on knife with several transforms. I remembered the feel...
How The Memory Plot Track Started in Blood
I first thought about the problem of memory and how we know what words mean a few years ago. In Blood, I decided to make memory a central plot track. So, as Mitch writes his story, The Patron Saint of Blood, he finds that his memory of past events fades. It turns out...
Mitch is Free
Pamela Hobart Carter--writer, poet, playwright, actress, most organized person I've ever met--read a pre-pub release of Blood. She sent me this note just to make me feel good. Mitch is free! No more cage for him. I have never read a book remotely akin to Blood before....
Will Theory Kill Writing?
Can writers theorize about writing without dying? Or, is theory best left to philosophers leaving writing to the writers? In Degrée Zero de l’écriture, Roland Barthes breaks us up into two categories: Ecrivants—who write about things and whose language is the means to...










