I took this in for a moment; sequenced my thoughts. “So what happens for the next two thirds?” I said.
“New stuff” she said. The penny dropped. Ah. You mean – you’re asking me to write a new book. And she was. I think I took it pretty well – they talked me down from the roof, gave me brandy and took it in turns to slap me hard across the face for a while. The next morning things looked a little better.
Seven months went by; I finished the virtually brand-new
novel, and – wouldn’t you know it? – my editor was right. It’s waaay better,
not because I’ve become Hemingway overnight, but because the shape is so much
neater. It is, I think, a coherent and shapely
piece. I choose the adjective advisedly my friends because when I was but a
student I used Jerome Stern’s book ‘Making Shapely Fiction’ quite a bit. (Not
enough to learn its lessons, evidently, but still.)
If you’re not familiar, it’s a whole bunch of clever
creative writing exercises, a list of dos and don’ts and an alphabetised
dictionary of good practice all in one. Stern’s introduction to his book is
interesting. He uses the idea of shapes as a vehicle for the organisation of exciting
but unconnected narrative strands. “Shapes”
he says, “show you how they can become
fiction.” He goes on to cite an apparently common experience of writers,
who begin by producing a story they’re pleased with. It just works. “That success” he goes on to say, “gives a pleasant confidence that’s dashed in the next story, which
turns out to be a multi-limbed mess. In the first story, you probably had a
natural shape that kept you from problems you didn’t know you couldn’t handle.”
Hold on a sec, Jerome – multi-limbed mess? That was me! So shapes keep us from
encountering problems we didn’t know we couldn’t handle. I like that. The
book’s got a decent sized toolkit of interesting shapes and each has a short
chapter devoted to it: Iceberg, Façade, Bear at the Door, Gathering and so on.
What isn’t there of course is ‘multi-limbed mess’, a shape I excel at.
So I’m hoping this lesson has stuck. Someday, I’m going to
plot and write another book, and, if I’m lucky, work with an editor to knock it
into – ahem – shape. I made it through the trauma this time, but I swear, if I
put myself in a position where I risk getting the same advice a second time,
I’ll spare everyone the trouble and just jump off that damn roof.
Hahaha, the first part of this made me laugh a lot. I think many of us have had editorial meetings like that. One day you'll be able to laugh about it. (Maybe.) Whatever happens next time, don't jump off the roof - even the most complex 'multi-limbed mess' can be disentangled, eventually.
ReplyDeleteChopped off story limbs could always come in handy, probably good to have a store for emergencies.
ReplyDeletePleased you didn't leap.
Thanks for your comments. I'll steer clear of the roof, I think. Learning every day...
ReplyDeleteYikes! Glad it worked out. I had to write a new ending for my book too - and panicked a bit - and of course, it is SO much better than the original. 'Making Shapely Fiction' sounds great - I think I'd better get hold of a copy before the edit notes for book 2 come in!
ReplyDeleteThis is exactly what happened me with my first book! How do I stop myself making the same mistakes in book 2? Great post!
ReplyDeleteThis is exactly what happened me with my first book! How do I stop myself making the same mistakes in book 2? Great post!
ReplyDelete