Saturday, July 14, 2007

It's All in the Telling

Not long ago, I decided to read a book. That in itself may not come as much of a surprise, but the book was Patrick Rothfuss's The Name of the Wind, a book that promises to be filled with oddly spelled names and cities and more that its share of kings and sorcerers--in short, all of the things that characterize one of the only two genres that I absolutely never read.

So why did I decide to read Rothfuss's book? It's simple. I read his blog. In fact, I so enjoyed his blog that I began the patchy-and-definitely-not-daily custom of Quote of the Day posts on my What's Wrong Around Us? blog. And it occurred to me that if the man could spin the saga of spending time in a bookstore when he should have been writing into interesting reading, I was pretty confident that he could hold my interest in a novel, even if his main character did have to begin his narrative by explaining how to pronounce his name.

A similar thought came to me recently when I read C.S. Lewis's Till We Have Faces. The story is a classic myth (that of Cupid and Psyche) retold, somewhat altered, but not so much so that there's much question about what's going to "happen". It doesn't matter, because Lewis has that way of creating prose that slips through your brain like sand through your fingers, requiring almost no effort, feeling warm and pleasant as it passes through, and leaving tiny traces that you'll be finding long after you've moved on.

This reminded me of how often I've heard novelists and would-be novelists debate the value (and even necessity) of outlines. You already know that my answer to the outline question is "write in the way that works best for you", but suddenly the outline question seems to me to run deeper than just whether or not they're necessary. The outline question raises the issue of whether we might be focusing on the wrong thing altogether. I've heard and read at various times that there are only 7 plots and that there are only 5. Undoubtedly, readers and writers could quibble all day about whether certain plots were subplots of other plots already described or each was unique, but the point is that there aren't a thousand plots. There aren't ten thousand. And there certainly aren't new plots created every day.

In fact, in some genres (romance springs to mind, but it seems unlikely that it's the only one), the plot is nearly identical for nearly every book in the genre. But some are better than others. Some make their authors wealthy while others are on the shelves only for a few weeks. Some keep us up late turning pages while others are returned to the library unfinished. Why? It's not the plot...it's the telling.

You'll be the very rare writer indeed if you come up with a totally unique plot, and you won't necessarily be a successful one. But come up with the right turns of phrase, the authenticity of expression, the writing that carries the reader from one line to the next like she was floating along on a gentle wave barely noticing the forward motion, and you will make a compelling story of whatever tale you tell.

5 comments:

~willow~ said...

hey there, dropping by via BlogCatalog, thought I'd weigh in with my 0.02c :-)

Sounds like we both appreciate the same "telling" of tales - I too recognize that there is pretty much no hope of finding a truly unique tale to tale anymore, what I want to achieve instead is a unique *voice* to tell my tales.

Thanks for the tip about Patrick Rothfuss - I *am* a fan of fantasy but I don't keep my ear to the ground for new/good books, so I'll be sure to check this book out at the library :-) I do agree with you about unpronouncable names, though - Robert Jordan has too many of them :p

Vera Bass said...

I think that story-telling is a *dimension* of living

Perhaps not everyone has the talent or inclination to write well (or even at all), yet I believe that everyone could find the way to tell a story.

Those who have the most powerful voices do transcend genres.

B. N. Sullivan said...

I think you hit it with the 'authenticity of expression.' That's what carries a tale for me, too. It's funny -- when dialogue and description (of places or settings, for instance) achieve authenticity, everything just flows. It's when inauthenticity arises -- and you notice it -- that the whole story is spoiled. Inauthenticity is like an unwelcome interruption.

Anonymous said...

Floating along the wave barely noticing movement. ooh Tiffany, I know I didn't quote you but what a wonderful last paragraph. I loved it.

Great comments from your peanut gallery… Kisses

"Sleeping Kitten - Dancing Dog!"

mum2twelve said...

So true!