This festive season, a lot of writers will be given gifts of brand-new notebooks. It’s a safe bet that most writers will appreciate the thought, plus they’re relatively inexpensive for all but the fanciest designs.

Indeed, some writers find they can more easily start a new project with a fresh book, even if – paradoxically – nobody wants to spoil the new pages with ink.

I’m someone who doesn’t don’t fall into that camp. I do write by hand much of the time, but I can reach into my cupboard and pick up at least one that still has a number of usable blank pages. I also don’t have the storage space for too many new books. As such, buying new is a rarity for me.

There is one exception to this. Every year, I buy a specific type of diary, usually a Moleskine or a Leuchtturm 1917. These have a diary week on each left-hand page, while the right side is feint-ruled, allowing for notes to be taken.

I began this approach after reading The Books of Albion, a collection of diaries by the musician Peter Doherty. His diaries often document what happened during a particular week or contain fragments of song lyrics or poems. Some pages also act as a scrapbook, with photographs and tickets glued in.

While my diaries don’t have this level of detail, it’s interesting to read what I’ve written some years before. Often I’ll find a draft of something that was never developed into a final piece, or occasionally an early draft of a now-finished work.

So until I really do run out of space, buying new notebooks will remain a once-yearly occurrence.

2 thoughts on “New Notebooks and Diaries

  1. I love notebooks but like you, I don’t often buy them as such although get a few given to me here and there. I too keep a yearly specific paper diary and it’s just in note form, really of main evetns of the day or things I did. For instance, yesterday’s entry reads “Unpacked new dinner set. Did post stats for wrap up”. So outlines but no details in depth like LJ.

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    1. Even a tiny snippet of what happened on a particular day can be a helpful reminder.

      On occasion, I remember the event, but I also erroneously recall it happening earlier or later in time than it actually did.

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