Tuesday, February 18, 2014

limping toward writing


guest post by Jerry Apps 


My writing career was greatly influenced by what happened in 1947. In January of that year, I came down with polio and was confined to bed for several weeks, out of school, and not able to walk. I was in eighth grade, attending a one-room country school.

That fall, able to walk but not run, I entered Wild Rose High School. I discovered I could not participate in any sports because of a bum leg, and was encouraged to take a typewriting class with a room full of girls (a rather enjoyable experience as it turned out). I became a reporter for the Rosebud, our school newspaper, and then editor. I wrote many of the articles, all of the editorials, and “borrowed” heavily from Reader’s Digest, Farm Journal, Wisconsin Agriculturist and other sources. I had not yet learned about plagiarism.

In 1966, after college, the army, marriage and the beginning of a full-time teaching job. I began freelancing a weekly column called “Outdoor Notebook” for several central Wisconsin newspapers. This was the first time I was paid for my writing, earning a hefty $5.00 for each column. I did this for ten years, not missing a week. I called these years of column writing my writing apprenticeship. Everything I wrote was published—the good, the bad, and the ugly.

My first book, The Land Still Lives, was published in 1970, which was the beginning of my book writing career. Several nonfiction books followed. I also had long wanted to write novels. After many rejections, false starts and abandoned projects, my first novel, The Travels of Increase Joseph came out in 2003. Since then I have written five additional novels—the most recent to be published in fall, 2014.

In 2012, Wisconsin Public TV contacted me about doing a documentary based on several of my books about early farm life in Wisconsin. The hour-long show (A Farm Story) came out in 2012, and was aired on some 65 public television stations in 49 states. WPT did a second hour-long documentary with me, (A Farm Winter), in 2012, which aired in 2013. This documentary is based on my book The Quiet Season, Wisconsin Historical Society Press, 2013.

After many years of not wanting people to know about my bout with polio and how it was the main reason I am writing today, I was convinced to write about the experience. Limping Through Life, (2013, Wisconsin Historical Society Press) is about my polio experience and how my writing career evolved over the years because of it.

After nearly fifty years as a professional writer (meaning it earns me a little money), I still try to write six days a week. And after all of these years, I am still learning how to do it.


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Visit Jerry Apps at his blog and learn more about him on his website.


2 comments:

  1. Really interesting to read how your writing career grew. I have greatly enjoyed all of your books that I have read, and particularly intrigued to hear the background to your professional writing history.

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  2. It's been said that you've single-handedly saved much of Wisconsin's history -- those "little" stories that don't always get told but make up the fabric of what life in our state is truly about. I must agree. My hope is that you'll have many more years to educate and entertain us. Am looking forward to your next fiction piece. I kinda like Ames County.

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