Quotations from My Writer’s Notebooks

By Marcus D. Niski

Over a long period of time now, I’ve collected a huge range of quotations and aphorisms from my reading and research that I’ve written down by hand in my notebooks, as well as engaging in the almost daily practice of writing my own observations and aphorisms – I suspect Paul Valery would be proud of my efforts indeed!

While I’ve made a sustained personal effort, Valery was undoubtedly one of the most prolific notebook writers of all time.

For those readers who are unfamiliar with his work, Valery was a master of observation and notetaking as the 29 published volumes of his Cahiers (notebooks) attest to:

 “Every morning he would get up at around five o’clock and write meditations, notes, and speculations in small volumes that he intended for no one but himself. There were more than 250 of these notebooks at the end of his life, and they are not only now available in published form, but are, ironically, among the most important and most read—most public—of his writings…” – Paul Valéry 1871–1945

Here are some of my favorite quotations and aphorisms on place, space, and writing from my collection of writers notebooks – particularly those around the themes of seeing, noticing and observing – the stuff of all great observational and literary writing whether about cities or otherwise …

Marcus D. Niski,  May 2017

 

About

Naked Cities Journal – Exploring The Minutiae of Everyday Urban Life

Naked Cities Journal attempts to bring together a number of passions that have captivated me over a lifetime: a love of exploring the urban landscape and its extraordinarily diverse range of places and spaces; a love of keeping writer’s notebooks; and a love of Urban Studies an intellectual discipline.

My interest in the minutiae of urban environments has been profoundly influenced by the works of such diverse writers as Georges Perec, Walter Benjamin, Georg Simmel, Blaise Cendrars, Herbert Huncke, William S. Burroughs, Edmund White (The Flaneur), Alain de Botton (The Art of Travel), Jane Jacobs and William H Whyte to name but a few…

Many creative inspirations for my writing projects have been drawn from reflective time either spent walking to or around my favorite places, or simply sitting in a favorite a place where I could engage in the art of people watching and making copious notes in my notebooks.

The literature devoted to the delicacies of ‘seeing and noticing’ cities most especially through the gaze of the flaneur – whether it be in the form of the novel, poetry or creative non fiction – is a distinct body of creative work authored by some of the great writers including Baudelaire, Aragon, Hugo and more recently by such contemporary authors as George Perec, Jane Jacobs and Philip Lopate.

My own humble perambulatory adventures over the years have taken me through the streets, lanes, and city centers of New York, Tokyo, Hong Kong, Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur, Penang, Saigon and Hanoi, the boulevards of Vienna, the urban canyons of Boston and Manhattan, the bohemian underground landscapes of Sydney in the 90’s, and the streets, lanes and hidden histories of my former home city of Melbourne, Australia – all in personal search of the unique myriad of ways in which people live and work and how they interact with the cities they live in.

In a world increasingly devoted to iteration, task and time focused interactions – as Simmel presciently predicted – it challenges us all to value the qualities of reflection, observation and contemplation even more.

Hoping you enjoy visiting Naked Cities Journal as much as I enjoy bringing it to you…

Marcus D. Niski
Salzburg, Austria

May 2017

 

Site author profile photograph by Wally Re © 2017

Inside the Writer’s Notebook

By Marcus D. Niski

On Keeping a Writer’s Notebook

“The notebooks of a writer have a very special function: in them he builds up, piece by piece, the identity of a writer to himself . . .”

– Susan Sontag

“…the point of my keeping a notebook has never been, nor is it now, to have an accurate factual record of what I have been doing or thinking”

– Joan Didion in Slouching Towards Bethlehem

For many years now I have been keeping as series of writer’s notebooks that I often refer to at different times and for different purposes.

These steadily accumulating archives with their pure white acid-free pages contain a number of amusing, intriguing and sometimes mundane treasures. From lists of books and research references, to exotic insights drawn from the ancients, my notebooks provide the perfect device for accumulating so much usable material for both fiction and non-fiction writing projects alike.

In spite of their obvious lack of technological sophistication, the humble writer’s notebook provides one of the most simple and reliable devices for recording a vast range of potential literary treasures.

Quotations and other fragments from the works of Henry Miller, Jean Genet, Blaise Cendrars, Albert Camus and Antoine de Saint-Exupery as well as poems, scribbled notes, reflections, postcards and other objets d’art are but a few examples of the sorts of literary flotsam and jetsam that adorn my much treasured notebooks.

The beauty and importance of the notebook undoubtedly lays not so much in what is recorded, but in the very fact that we are attuned that there is so much that can be recorded.

Unlike the journal, notebooks are by their very nature random and spontaneous: the golden rule is that there are no firm rules about form or structure. Record what you like where and whenever you like. Notebooks are the ideal way of recording overheard conversations, observations, random thoughts and streams of consciousness – all of which may provide some inspiring and intriguing material to use either as a departure point for writing or as material in an existing writing project.

One my most favorite aspects of keeping a series of notebooks over the years has been the collecting of quotations. From Marcus Aurelius and Euripides, to Goethe and Shakespeare, my notebooks have become an important aide memoir to some of the world’s great literature. Whenever I read I am always with a notebook at hand waiting for some charming or captivating morsel to transcribe into to my collection.

Part of the challenge in keeping a writer’s notebook undoubtedly lies in utilising your powers of insight and imagination. Learning to see more acutely, read more critically and recording detail more effectively are undoubtedly important skills in any writers’ armoury. Use you notebook as a means of recording whenever and wherever possible.

My obsession with writer’s notebooks has lead me to a never-ending personal journey that has physically taken me from the literature archives in my former home city of Melbourne’s State Library, to New York Public Library’s Berg Collection and the Butler Library at Columbia University, not to mention countless hundreds hours of searching digital collections around the world.

I’ve held some of Kerouac’s most important notebooks in my very own hands in the New York Public Library’s Berg Collection, as well as perused the notebooks, scrapbooks and journals kept by William S. Burroughs at Butler Library’s archives where Herbert Huncke’s cache of notebooks are also held along with those of legendary American beat poet Gregory Corso.

Almost every day I turn to my own notebooks as a source of immense ongoing pleasure in recording thoughts, writing aphorisms, making observations and engaging in a secretive form of self-writing that has become part of an almost life-long ritual.

Your local bookshop or stationery supplier probably keeps any number of excellent notebooks. Choose one that has just the right form and feel for you and one that you will feel that you will use rather than leave on the shelf. Keep your notebook with you as often as practical and use it in particular when you are reading and/or doing research.

In the coming journal posts, I will flesh out some of the things that have intrigued me about the art and craft of choosing and using a writer’s notebook. Indeed, you would surprised like all things, that there is a kind of technique and art to choosing and using a notebook that hopefully will inspire you and instill in you a desire to keep your notebooks on a ongoing and intensive basis as an endless source of inspiration for your writing projects. I will also post some images from my notebooks that I’ve kept over the years as a source of inspiration in taking up the art form if you haven’t already!

In keeping a writer’s notebook you’ll be in the company of some of the world’s great writers. Indeed, the humble notebook has served as an important departure point for some of the most important works by such luminaries as George Orwell, Virginia Woolf, Bruce Chatwin, Bertolt Brecht, Albert Camus, Paul Auster to name but a few…

Marcus D. Niski,  April 2017

* Sections of the above writing appeared in The Australian Writer, No.313 Feb/March 1999 as reprinted in Irina Dunn’s, The Writer’s Guide, Allen & Unwin, 1999.

Space – by Marcus D. Niski

Space.

The concept of space is an enigma [to me a least].

Yet Perec and Bachelard are two of the greatest exponents in attempting to document the concept of space in its illusive and ethereal qualities.

We live in spaces.

We inhabit spaces.

We are in space.

Space is all around us, and yet nowhere.

My writing desk is one of my most important spaces.

Writing is a private activity, yet it can take place in either a private or public space.

Sometimes mundane spaces are my best source of inspiration and pleasure in terms of triggering my urge to write.

Georges Perec was a master at documenting the mundane places and spaces of our ordinary lives, as well as the objects that dwell in them: the objects on a writing desk; the bedroom; the apartment…

Writing is an inhabitation according to Perec: A writer inhabits the page and his or her world as well as inhabiting space.

Let us together explore the minutiae of spaces all around us in all their detail and infinite glory…

[MN] 14 May 2017 – 7 March 2019