I belong to several
writers’ organizations that have email listservs for asking questions of other
members. Recently, one woman sought guidance on how to get started writing fiction
and asked for recommendations about classes, retreats, and other ways to learn
the craft. One person recommended a specific online class, but the next person essentially
vetoed that. The second person told her to just sit down and write it and then
find some beta readers or a critique group to read it. Her response seemed to
accept that advice, but it also highlighted her naivete. (I won’t give the
details because I don’t want to embarrass her.)
Yes, if you want to be a
writer, you have to write. That’s so obvious that it always surprises me when
people feel they have to say it. But you start by writing short pieces and
exercises, not with a book you hope to publish. Especially if it is fiction.
I just finished reading several
middle-grade novels—all self-published or from small publishers—written by
people who don’t understand how fiction works. The authors knew nothing about
point-of-view or showing versus telling or how to make dialogue sound natural. And
if I hadn’t been reading them as research, I never would have finished. I
certainly won’t be buying anything else by those authors.
Experience has shown me
that it is much harder to write fiction than nonfiction. Obviously, all
nonfiction should create interest and flow well, and those types labeled
creative nonfiction (e.g., memoirs and biographies and anything that tells a
story) can be closer to fiction than to other nonfiction offerings. But creative
nonfiction aside, most nonfiction is read for the information it contains, not
for how it is presented.
Novels are different.
Fiction readers don’t want information—they want an escape. A successful novel
brings them into the story with the characters to experience what the
characters experience and feel what the characters feel.
That’s what the fiction conventions
are designed to do. A consistent point-of-view (single or multiple) helps readers
identify with the characters and experience the story with them. A sudden POV
jump breaks that connection. Showing helps readers see the world through the
characters’ eyes. Too much telling distances the reader from that world.
Dialogue that uses tags improperly makes the entire scene feel stilted and
unrealistic.
So my advice to the woman
on the listserv is to take classes and read books and attend conferences on writing
fiction.
Then sit down and write.
1 comment:
Great advice, Kathryn!
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