Australian author, Isobelle Carmody, is best known for her Obernewtyn Chronicles, which she began writing longhand at age 14. While she has since acquainted herself with a computer, she has never strayed far from handwriting her thoughts and ideas, whether it’s the first draft of a new novel or a newsy letter to one of her many correspondents.
Isobelle once counted herself among the few who still preferred a pen to a keyboard. That has changed in recent times. Self-isolation has become the catalyst in the revival of letter writing and more people are rediscovering the thrill of finding a letter or postcard in their mailbox.
In fact, the humble handwritten letter is inadvertently documenting this unique time in history for us. It’s a keeper of memories that we can revisit and even share with the next generation.
Isobelle talks about the joys of letter writing, how it’s helping people during this time and how parents can get their children to put pen to paper.
How long have you been a letter writer?
I’ve been writing letters for about 40 years now. I began when I was 25. I still do chunks of my creative writing by hand but I get my fix by writing letters.
Who are your regular letter recipients?
There are many and at least half are not writers. One of the longest is a fellow fantasy writer and academic who lives in Woollongong. We’ve written to each other for about 15 years and the correspondence has only faltered in recent times because I am doing a PhD.
Another long-time correspondent was a young woman in Briagalong to whom I began writing when she was still a schoolgirl and after I awarded her a writing prize. We corresponded right through her high school, marriage and three children, but it tapered off when she got truly busy as a mother.
There were a few young people with whom I corresponded first as fans but who soon, through long interactions, became friends. I also write letters to my daughter and mother.
Why do you choose to correspond through a handwritten letter instead of email or text?
I loathe writing emails. They are for business only and I feel them to be thieves of time at their worst and at their best, the medium for exciting news and requests. Typing is boring. I can write a book on a computer but a letter seems to make me focus on the words. Writing with a pen and paper also makes you think and write differently.
If I get an especially nice email, I’ll print it out, handwrite a letter and ask for their address to post it. If they don’t want to give me an address, I don’t send it.
A handwritten letter is not something you can send to ten other people in a cut and paste mode. Those who write to me, and to whom I write know this letter is only for them. It’s entirely personal and specific.
I’m in a state closer to creative writing when I write rather than type a letter. I’m also apparently guilty of writing like whomever I am reading. I remember a friend once wrote back to ask if I was reading Anna Karenina, and I was!
What does it feel like to drop a letter in the post box?
I feel triumphant - like the baton has been successfully passed and now it is up to someone else.