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A window for your diary

01:00 Mon 15th Jan 2001 |

by Nicola Shepherd

A DIARY�is the staple of every child's stocking at Christmas and many a grown-up's, too.

But after you have filled in your personal details, including blood group, and made careful entries of the family's birthdays, a diary's fate is often to be forgotten at the back of a drawer.

There is, however, a big difference between a personal organiser, a tool of forward planning, and a diary, a weapon of backward reflection.

The daily writings of hundreds of famous and not so famous people have topped the best-selling book list for decades now. Our appetitie for other people's observations on the minutiae of life continues unsatiated.

Churchill wrote his every night before bed no matter what time it was, and no matter how much champagne and brandy he had quaffed.

��Press Association
Alan Clark
Modern day famous diarists, the late Alan Clark and Tony Benn adopted the same disiplined writing regime: every night before bed no matter what the time. Now that's commitment.

Woodrow Wyatt wrote about having dinner with all the most famous people in the world and, crucially, recorded what they actually said, so it wasn't just a list of heavily 'dropped' names.

Asking yourself what you want to write a diary for is a good first question. To unburden the most personal thoughts or dilemmas As a record for your family or the world Or, like Woodrow Wyatt, just for the money

Thoughts of publication are likely to inhibit the diary-keeper's observations and comments, but if you write a diary and you definitely don't want it published after your death, you had better lodge it with a lwayer.

Alan Clark, and his inspiration Samuel Pepys, wrote in deliberately indecipherable shorthand. Pepys' code was only cracked many years after his death, but Alan Clark allowed a translation before his, to the joy of those to whom political gossip is the very stuff of life.

A diary kept during periods of intense emotional, social and political upheaval is immensely valuable. The� Second World War generals who kept diaries did so against army regulations, but provided an invaluable insight into the personal tragedies and triumphs of war.

Have you ever kept a diary Are you planning to in 2001 Who would you write it for Would you want your mother to read it Share your thoughts on diaries by visiting The AnswerBank� message boards now.

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