Jun 14

So you have a vague idea for a story.

So you have a vague idea for a story. How do you get from there to an actual story? Here’s Damon Knight (Creating Short Fiction):

1. Particularize. A particular character, in a particular place, feeling a particular way about a particular situation. Someone who you understand, and for whom you feel affection.

2. Complicate. Introduce another character, event, or circumstance that makes the outcome less certain and therefore more interesting.

Having at least two characters will protect the main character from excessive navel-gazing and give them something to push against (even if the two are allies). Three characters are even better.

3. Criticize. Why did this happen? How is it that here this, but there that? What led to this change? What leads on from it?

4. Research. Don’t learn everything you can. Learn everything you need. Then think about it.

5. Constrain. The more you know about the specifics of your story, the more things there are that can’t happen – which is good, because that guides you to what can happen.

You can start from any of the four of: character, setting, situation, emotion. But you need all four to write your story.

Think of four things that can happen next. Reject them all and think of a fifth one that’s less obvious. If it doesn’t move you forward towards having all four elements, try another, or adjust the elements you already have until they work together.

Don’t make characters to serve only one story purpose. They need to have their own background and their own past, and be the kind of people who will do what you want naturally and inevitably – but who also have other dimensions to them.

In the middle of the four elements you will find theme. Don’t start there. 

#shortfiction

Jun 13

“Love and understanding are the missing ingredients in most slushpile stories.

“Love and understanding are the missing ingredients in most slushpile stories. If you don’t understand your character, you can’t make her believable, and if you don’t care about her, the reader won’t either.”

– Damon Knight, Creating Short Fiction

#shortfiction

Jun 13

Damon Knight, in Creating Short Fiction, talks about four stages of development for writers.

Damon Knight, in Creating Short Fiction, talks about four stages of development for writers. (He acknowledges that there are stages beyond four, but after that point they don’t need help.)

1. Narcissistic daydreamer. Think “Mary Sue author-self-insertion fanfic”. The way to get out of this stage is to imagine how some other character feels about the author self-insertion/idealisation.

2. Trivial writer. Stories are half-formed, with beginnings and ends but no middles (where the plot and characters would develop). The characters are tokens, placeholders. There are no complications; it’s just a bunch of things that happen.

3. Writer with technical issues. We now have complete stories, but there are problems with plot structure and characterisation. The plots are poorly constructed, and the characters are puppets. Nobody cares what happens to them, and what happens to them sometimes makes little sense.

4. Competent writer. You’ve learned how to solve the technical issues at least well enough that people will buy your stories.

Knight (who taught writing for decades) observes that people who start writing later in life, at least early 30s, often manage to skip stage 1, and sometimes also stage 2.

The way out of stages 3 and 4 is by learning technique. You can do this by yourself through trial and error, or you can take instruction.

#shortfiction

Jun 13

“Most of the student writers I meet fall into two classes: those who have something to say but don’t know how, and…

“Most of the student writers I meet fall into two classes: those who have something to say but don’t know how, and those who know how, to some degree, but have nothing to say. Members of this second group are oftener men than women…. Looked at as a technical construct, a story is a shell built to contain something.”

– Damon Knight, Creating Short Fiction

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Jun 13

“Certainly concealment is part of writing, and we all hide in our charactrs; but writing is also a way of revealing…

“Certainly concealment is part of writing, and we all hide in our charactrs; but writing is also a way of revealing ourselves. Either we do this voluntarily and courageously, or we do it out of timidity and in spite of ourselves. The unhappy young writer who invents heroes of stupefying intelligence, wisdom, beauty, strength, and virtue is like a child trying to hide behind a fencepost. She can’t hide all of herself, or even choose which parts to reveal.”

– Damon Knight, Creating Short Fiction

#shortfiction