The writing fever
The writing fever is back. I think I'm really trying to find my own voice as a writer. When I read my writings of the last three years, what I see are distinctly derivative plotlines and voice.
And for now, I'm fine with it. I'm finding the right niche, and when I hit it, I think it'll be clear. It seems the easiest at this learning stage to find a mold I like and try to fill it. When the mold feels really right, I can smash it to bits and start all over again.
The first two years of NaNoWriMo, I worked on light-hearted, historically inaccurate Regency Era romance novels (not Regencies, which are a more specific subgenre). The third year, I worked on a Young Adult novel about falling in love for the first time, experiencing loss, lacking control and agency, and struggling with difficult family relationships.
I've been tossing around ideas for this year already. One of the themes I want to explore is the ability to draw a clear line between your current decisions and the past events of your personal history that inform those decisions.
Love is such a strongly motivating theme for me -- and I don't mean just the light-hearted headiness/excitement of early love, but the maturation of love, the complexities that make it a struggle, but something worth fighting for, nonetheless. There is something so basic, so integral to the human experience about reaching out and finding someone with whom you can create this new thing that is your family and your lover and your best friend, new and separate and different from the close-knit friendships and beloved familial ties that had come before, that the very idea that you can tell a complete story of someone without this serving as the backbone is bizarre to me.
[Note to self: learn to write better sentences.]
I don't really have a plot together yet, and I don't know who my characters will be. I feel like I'm drawing a lot from my readings of Jennifer Crusie's works right now, having just finished "Anything But You". Her writing is indeed light-hearted, but the real, subtle strength lies in her ability to draw on real-life hurdles and insecurities, and showing the growth of her characters, rather than relying on external circumstances or inane misunderstandings to drive the plot. It took me reading three of her books to pick up on that, because this common thread is subtle and well-crafted.
I find myself listening to conversations, picking up lines from tv shows or books or songs, trying out different stories in my head. I'm starting to understand what writers mean when they say they are always filled with stories.
The key is to harness that process and work on it actively, to pick out where the strengths are and where the weaknesse are, to pay attention when and why stories are being told well and what has gone wrong when they are told badly.
That's essentially the same process that Seppo actively applies when he's playing or thinking about games. It's a valuable lesson I've learned from him. It's so easy when I'm just reading for pleasure to become a lazy reader and letting the words just take over, instead of an active participant in the narrative and understanding when the author is doing a good job of leading me down a path and when the author is clumsily dragging me over painful mounds of pointy stones.
One of my weaknesses is the inability to be succinct and direct. I need to be able to let the actions drive the story and show the internal motivations of the characters, rather than tediously describing how they feel, thus, how the reader should feel about a scene. It'll take practice and constant active analysis. But I enjoy that, so it should come relatively easily. :)
2 Comments:
Just a quick response to: "There is something so basic, so integral to the human experience about reaching out and finding someone with whom you can create this new thing that is your family and your lover and your best friend, new and separate and different from the close-knit friendships and beloved familial ties that had come before, that the very idea that you can tell a complete story of someone without this serving as the backbone is bizarre to me."
Love/Partnership/etc might be a huge part of your life, but it isn't for everyone. I know many people, not just young people but older as well, who have never really experienced that, for whom partnership with another person is not at all a central part of their life. Who claim to not even want it. Now, their stories aren't "complete" yet, but I assert that it's quite possible for people to have whole, compelling life stories that don't involve finding love/partnership with another person(s).
I read your comment over about three times, because I kept being struck with the notion that I completely agree with you, yet I still stand by the gist of my statement, and needed to mull over how both could be true.
I've come to the conclusion that the thing that to me is bizarre -- rather than unfathomable -- is when someone tells a story which does in fact include the love/partnership as a part of the story, but as a footnote or a sidebar, something to give "flavor" to the story rather than a fundamental part of the story.
But when I say I find it bizarre, I don't mean that I don't think perfectly normal people don't exist who have 1) fulfilling lives without love or 2) fulfilling lives where the love is merely an aside, but that I can't imagine myself not putting the utmost importance on it when I happen upon it or the possibility of it.
To be very very specific, it drives me crazy when action movies have some convoluted "love story" tacked on to it.
I can know what other ways of life exist out there and I can understand them, but the critical difference between other people's ways of life and my own path is that I find some choices to ultimately be fundamental to who I am that I can't picture myself living a different way and feeling like I am living the way that is true to me.
That was a bit of reflexive phrasing. :D
So I think that I expressed myself poorly, where I should have made it explicit that I think there is something so basic to me and so integral to my cross-section of the human experience ... etc. and instead gave the impression that everyone must live this way.
Because I don't. And I don't mean to invalidate or judge other people's differences of priority. For me, it is the relationship that takes the highest priority. For some, it is their careers. For others, it is improving the world through charity work. For still others, it's leaving behind a worthwhile legacy. And just as it would be wrong for someone else to impose their priorities on my life, I find it would be wrong for me to assert my priorities unto someone else's life.
To me, the love relationship drive me forward. To me, it is what I am the most passionate about. And I think that's why I read about falling in love, about mature love, about everyday conflicts in everyday loves, and about when love is a distant, broken memory.
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