As I mentioned in my last post (“The Spell Check Technique”), I’ve played around with more than a few means for generating text. Another one that I used when writing Giant Slugs is a trick that I somewhat jokingly called “backmasking.” Here’s how it works:

Write a sentence or the start of a sentence.

Reverse it. Then “write through” the result, and use that to complete the sentence.

For instance:

Start of sentence: I don’t like visiting my dentist because…

I don’t like visiting my dentist because… Reversed (I used this site): …esuaceb tsitned ym gnitisiv ekil t’nod I

Because the reversed text can be somewhat daunting to look at (not to mention nonsensical), I use it more to improvise, rather than as literally received:

esuaceb > He’s a suave celeb

tsitned > in tinted designer frames

ym > YM magazine

gnitisiv > sensitive gums

ekil > are killing me

t’nod I > tonight I can’t nod off

I then play around with that; hence:

I don’t like visiting my dentist because he’s a suave celeb in tinted designer frames, popular in the pages of YM (which is all that he keeps in his office). Now my sensitive gums are killing me tonight, and I can’t nod off.

Me, I rather like “open-ended” techniques such as this one, which suggest new directions the writing can take, but that aren’t completely formulaic (i.e., producing only one result). Rather than the above, the reversed text could have generated something entirely different:

esuaceb > he’s as acerbic as suede

tsitned > tsar’s needling

ym > why him?

gnitisiv > g’nite I sign

ekil > cheekily

t’nod I > tea Thai noodle

Hence:

I don’t like my dentist because he’s as acerbic as suede (i.e., not very acerbic), and I prefer a tsar’s needling wit from anyone who would needle me. So why him? Thus, “g’nite” I signed, and cheekily biked to a Thai noodle house to drink tea.

I won’t claim that either of these finished sentences are exceptional, but they are sentences that I could never have written straight out of my brain, without the assistance of this rather simple method. It’s a good way to break out of writer’s block, or to explore some new directions your writing can take. And of course you’re free to write a few such sentences, then combine the results. So, while I may not want to keep this exact wording, or even these actual sentences, I at least now have the idea of a suave, vain, yet witless dentist who’s being abandoned by a narrator that intends to drown his or her dental misery in spicy southeast Asian cuisine. It’s a long, long way from Clare to here.

Another thing I like about this method is that the more strictly you employ it, the more you keep using the same letters and letter combinations, which provides some symmetry to the sentence—near or even total palindromic symmetry.

Of course, that’s also the technique’s downside. Words will always produce the same results when reversed—”my” will always be “ym,” so you’ll always have “YM Magazine” suggesting itself to you. (You might also be unable to see it as anything other than “my” backward.) One solution here is to add in the “stripping” and “chunking” steps from the Spell Check Technique. Doing this gives you a new way to view the backward text, pushing you toward different conclusions:

Start of sentence: I don’t like visiting my dentist because…

I don’t like visiting my dentist because… Reversed : …esuaceb tsitned ym gnitisiv ekil t’nod I

: …esuaceb tsitned ym gnitisiv ekil t’nod I Stripped : esuacebtsitnedymgnitisivekiltnodI

: esuacebtsitnedymgnitisivekiltnodI Broken into 5-letter chunks: esuac ebtsi tnedy mgnit isive kiltn odI

Now reading/writing through it yields:

esuac > sauce

ebtsi > Etsy

tnedy > trendy

mgnit > MGMT

isive > massive

kiltn > kitten quilts

odI > Odie

Hence:

I don’t like visiting my dentist because he won’t share the sauce (Etsy? trendy bands like MGMT?) of his massive kitten quilts, making me feel like an Odie.

There are so many possibilities hidden inside such mundane words!

… Of course, you can also just totally integrate this technique with the spell speck one, and run spell check on the chunks. Doing that yields:

esuac > sumac

esuac > sumac ebtsi > bets

tnedy > teddy

mgnit > magnet

isive > sieve

kiltn > kilt

odI > ode

Hence:

I don’t like visiting my dentist because whenever he puts me under he hands me a teddy stuffed with sumac, and places small bets on the side with the hygienist while drilling my molars—plus he’s a terrible sieve with my secrets—and yet the fact that he wears a kilt and composes odes to the benefits of brushing yank me back to him like magnets …

BONUS CODA!

If you’re feeling especially clever, you can use this technique to do actual backmasking—that is, you can encode backward messages into the texts you write:

Start sentence: Paul is dead.

Paul is dead. Reversed: daed si luaP

Written through:

Daedalus sips Luapula. Mirandaed mafiosi luap. Logodaedaly assists bluecaps.

… Is it art? I have no idea. (I assure you it’s actual English—albeit the awkward English that often arises from the employment of strict constraints.) More importantly, it’s fun, and certainly a good way to learn new words!

A few comments here: Since I was introducing new letters, I decided to keep those additions systematic (first at the start of each reversed word, then at the end, then surrounding). Patterns indicate intention. Repeating the hidden string also helps, and even makes perfect sense, since alleged backmasked messages were always repeated (again, patterns indicate…).

OK, go nuts & enjoy!

Update 1: There’s been some commenting on the Batman image above. Yes, it’s taken from a real issue; it’s the cover of Batman #222, June 1970. The art is by the brilliant Neal Adams, whom many believe to be the greatest comics artist of the 70s. (The story itself, inside, was drawn by Irv Novick and the recently deceased Dick Giordano; it was written by Frank Robbins, probably based on an idea by Julius Schwartz.) You can read more about that particular issue here, here, and here. As that latter site says:

During this period, DC Comics was desperately attempting to court the so-called “youth” market, the comic-reading segment of which usually ignored DC’s product in favor of Marvel’s hipper approach to its material. Although it’s doubtful if editor Julius Schwartz, Frank Robbins or Irv Novick (all well into middle age) were Beatle fans – or even “got” the Beatles at all – but apparently, they were counting on these pseudo-Beatles to lure young readers away from their competition.

For more about this time and place in pop culture history, you might check out an article I wrote about Batman in the 40s, 50s, and 60s, being the seventh installment in an eight-part analysis I did of Frank Miller’s Batman: The Dark Knight Returns (1986). (Part 1 and Part 2 examine Miller’s career before that comic; Part 3, Part 4, Part 5, and Part 6 perform a close reading of its four issues, Part 7 provides more context for TDKR in Batman’s history, and Part 8 looks at Miller’s later career.)

I love comics almost as much as I love generating text!

Update 2: Paul McCartney later wrote a song called “222.” Coincidence? Or … conspiracy?

Update 3: Related posts:

Update 4: Other related posts:

Tags: backmasking, Batman, Giant Slugs, Neal Adams, paul mccartney, the spell check technique, vocabulary