The Courier-Record

WORLD TRAVEL, PEOPLE INSPIRE BLACKSTONE WRITER

‘I will always paint with words,’ says local resident


Tyler Scott

Tyler Scott

Isak Dinesen once wrote in her short story, Babette’s Feast, that “A great artist is never poor.”

I may not be ready to call myself great yet, but those words certainly ring true for me. No matter where I live, what I do, or whether I get paid or not, I will always be a writer.

This all started during childhood. At a young age, my parents realized I loved to write and they usually gave me a large box of stationery for Christmas, brightly-colored paper with matching envelopes. By the end of the day, I would be sitting at a table, writing my thank you notes.

When I started going to Camp High Rocks in Brevard, North Carolina, I was 12, and campers had to present a letter home to counselors every Thursday night in order to see the movie; I usually handed over a few letters.

As I began to travel, summer school in the South of France, junior year abroad at The Sorbonne, a whistle-stop tour around Asia. . . there were long colorful letters sent home. My parents used to read them to their friends, and I have always taken that as a compliment.

I am one of those writers who is an audodidact. I didn’t study journalism in college (I was a history major) nor did I intern for a newspaper. I taught myself by placing publications like The New York Times and Vanity Fair around my typewriter and later computer and circled sentences so I could teach myself how to set-up quotes.

I also read, read, read – authors like Austen, Colette, Steinbeck, and Capote. When I lived in Washington, D.C. (while selling handbags at Woodward and Lothrop), if it was a day to write, I would force myself to walk around town ‘til I had an idea or plot in my head. This always worked.

Part of the reason I moved to Southside Virginia is I knew there would be plenty of amusing and unusual stories. Furthermore, an area like this sparks your imagination.

I never climbed Mt. Everest but when I was 22, I traveled around the world, visited friends in New Zealand and Australia, crewed on sailboats in the Indian Ocean and Red Sea, and settled down in the Seychelles, a Communist country a thousand miles off the coast of Africa.

Two and a half years later, I returned home. I had taught school and learned Creole. I had lost a friend to Leptospirosis. And I had fled a very bad coup d’etat. With a trip like that, it wasn’t hard to find a publisher for my story, and I’ve been writing ever since.

I always knew I could sell articles if I visited interesting places, talked to interesting people, and tended to write about subjects no one else bothered with. This explains why I have fished with oystermen; ridden in police cars, lights flashing, sirens blaring; spent time with a man sentenced to life in prison for murder; and visited former Speaker of the House Tip O’Neill.

I do have a few ground rules, however: I tend to stay away from math, science, and economics, and I don’t interview gang members.

My heart is heavy these days because one of my mentors, Allan Brownfeld, just died at 85. Author, expert on the Middle East, syndicated columnist, staff for a Viceyears President and Congressmen. He printed my first articles in the early 1980s and, just as importantly, gave me confidence to find my way.

Thanks to people like Allan, I will always paint with words.

ABOUT THE WRITER

Tyler Scott has been publishing her articles and essays since the early 1980s.

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