After a productive time in Weymouth , this week I decided that the moment
had come to create a ‘draft monograph’ folder, i.e. a ring-binder with coloured cardboard dividers, which houses each chapter as it is drafted.
When I was writing my thesis, I had a
battered purple lever-arch file into which I reverently slotted each chapter
as, month by month, they rolled off the production line. Yesterday, I stood over the Somerville Fellows’ printer, watching the machine spit out three draft chapters of Elusive Church
on fresh, hot sheets, and feeling pleasantly taken aback at how much of the
book already exists.
The monograph ring binder is a big step,
the point at which the ‘virtual’ book which exists in your head, and in scattered
electronic files all over your computer, begins to take on a tentative physical
form. With all its immaculately printed pages, it is the monograph in embryo… something which is starting to resemble (if
Kindle users will forgive me) a ‘real’ book.
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