Does this quote make anyone else’s blood boil? This type of talk makes me want to be alternately scathing, snarky, and pitying. I got it from an essay by Kat Howard, about her chance parking lot encounter with some fellow who made light of her post doc position in medieval and speculative literature.
I know I’m preaching to the choir here, and that most (if not all) of my readers understand how truly challenging and difficult it is to write a novel, whether it be mainstream or genre, adult or children’s, an epic tome or a light-hearted romp. And I don’t want to get into the genre/literary question, so let’s please not go there.
Instead, I’m going to break down this statement. Anyone can write popular fiction, can they? Let’s take a look.
Writing Fiction — Lifestyle — What It Takes
2. Avoiding the lure of Facebook, Twitter, Wikipedia, Farmville, MMORPGs, Solitaire, Minesweeper, etc. so you can actually do said writing.
3. Carving the time out of your already busy life, in which you’re also expected to have a day job, take care of your family, clean and do chores, and deal with life’s multiple disasters and time sinks.
4. Smiling and nodding when people say patronizing things to you. Explaining kindly and gently that building a writing career takes a long time, and no, it won’t make you rich. Alternately, getting into a lot of arguments.
5. Thinking about your story in the shower, while walking the dog, while doing the above-mentioned cooking and cleaning, while driving from point A to point B, and while you should be sleeping.
6. In your copious spare time (ha!), reading tons and tons of books, both in and out of your genre. Not to mention your nonfiction research materials.
7. Dealing on a daily basis with rejection and maintaining a positive upbeat attitude, a can-do spirit, and continued forward thinking to the next project.
Writing Fiction — Craft — Required Understanding
1. Characters. This includes understanding every character in your book, knowing their back story, knowing their mannerisms and how they speak (word choice, etc.), knowing what they would know, knowing their motivations (what they want) and making sure you’re consistent about it. You need to keep your POV consistent over the course of the book, whatever you decide (first, close third, omniscient, etc.) Your protagonist needs to be sympathetic in some way. He/she/it needs to be a driving force in the novel, not a passive character who is only acted upon. Also your protagonist and probably other characters as well need a moving and well executed character arc, in which they grow and change and react to events and are different by the end of the novel.
2. Plot. This includes knowing how to structure a novel, making sure there is interesting conflict, making sure the stakes are periodically raised and the conflict builds over the course of the novel, knowing what your main narrative engine is, as well as keeping track of subplots and planning the correct number of them. Also the plot needs to hold together and make sense (no plot holes, please), you need to know the purpose of and conflict in each scene. You’ve got to keep the pace up (make stuff explode or whatever) or it will get too boring. This would also include making sure the continuity is sound and that the scenes happen in the correct order. You must make sure you create a hook at the beginning to draw the reader into the novel, and you aim for achieving emotional resonance and a certain closure at the end of the novel (unless it’s in a series, in which case you’re busy thinking about the overall series arc as well as the novel arc as well as deciding whether the novel needs to stand on its own or not).
3. World building. This is understanding how your world works. This includes the magic system, which needs to have rules and costs; geography, especially of a secondary world or another planet; economy; political system; social structure and mores; religion; technology level as well as any invented tech; magical creatures and/or aliens and how they differ from humans; and various existing infrastructure. Then once you’ve created your world, you have to get it across in the novel without over-utilizing info dumps or slowing down the pace.
4. Prose. This is being able to use the English language passably well, which is surprisingly difficult, even for native speakers. This includes knowing as many grammar rules as you can cram into your brain and then knowing when to break them. Points to remember include the following: eschew adverbs and speech tags other than “said” and “asked” and minimize speech tags in general. Vary sentence structure. Try really, really hard not to overwrite or use too many adjectives for your really shiny setting. Remember that you do have to say something about the setting, though. Try not to overuse words such as “that” or “really” or the “to be” verb. Use active verbs, but not too many weird verbs or it’s distracting. Spelling skills also help as spellcheck won’t catch all your mistakes.
Writing Popular Fiction that Everyone Likes — Good luck.
1. In order to make your fiction popular, you have to sell it. Unfortunately, being able to sell something is not necessarily the same skill set as being able to create something.
2. Ability to write and deliver pitches, queries, synopses, and basic summaries of your book that will make random people on the street want to read it instead of getting on with their lives. Also organizational ability to keep track of it all, including short story submissions, workshop/conference deadlines, and market research.
3. Social media and promotion! Blogging, tweeting, Facebooking, keeping up-to-date on the latest trends, recording a podcast. Being interviewed for blogs, radio programs, and podcasts. Writing guest posts, being active on forums, making a book trailer, always presenting your best possible face to the public. School visits, public readings, convention and conference appearances.
4. Being lucky enough to write in line with the current zeitgeist and have your novel come out before it ends.
5. Having your publisher decide that your novel is SO AWESOME that they’re going to pour big marketing dollars into its production and promotion. Getting good bookstore placement. Getting into many bookstores at all. Having your cover not suck. Getting big names to blurb the novel. (Please note that many of these things are outside the writer’s control.)
What did I miss? Feel free to kvetch below. Even being incomplete, I think my list makes it clear that writing a novel is never easy, and writing a really good novel is even harder than that. I rest my case.
I don’t know why, this but line made me giggle:
“You’ve got to keep the pace up (make stuff explode or whatever) or it will get too boring.”
More asploding things! I demand it!
Hooray for giggles!
Yony says about writing stories: “When in doubt, have a murder.” Similar to the explosions. 🙂
Or a marriage. Or both. I sometimes suspect that Shakespeare used that as a rule of thumb.
Hi, I really enjoyed your posting today about writing, because I just managed to write a short essay last weekend and it was far more difficult than writing curriculum or technical manuals which I do at work. And a lot more fun. But easy, no way! Thanks for your thoughts. – Eleni Otto Corrales NM
Thanks, Eleni! I’m glad you enjoyed it. I agree, it’s both more difficult and more fun. 🙂
Loved your comments on lifestyle of a writer. How true.
My current nemesis is Solitaire. 🙂
It’s easy to write fiction? Yeah, thought that, too until I got my first critique.
Ah yes, I remember my first critique. It was an eye-opener.
Yep.
Everyone thinks they can churn out a Twilight.
If only they had time to sit down and write.
If only they could be bothered.
If only they could lower themselves to being remembered for something like that.
If only they were a sell-out.
If only…
There’s always an ‘if only’, isn’t there?
It’s so easy to find an ‘if only’ to apply to any situation. Humans are geniuses at rationalization and making excuses.
And then there’s the abrupt wake-up call when you realize you had no idea what you were talking about. 🙂
Hi, Amy,
Love your blog! Found my way here from a recommendation in the comments at John Scalzi’s “Whatever”.
While I agree that writing can be difficult, I think we do need to put it in perspective. My grandfather literally dug ditches as a job for most of his life. So, while writing at times makes me want to pull out what little hair I have left. . .
That said, it is terrifically, astoundingly annoying when someone responds to hearing you’re a writer by saying they want to be one too, if they could just find the time, or gee, what an easy job, etc, etc.
I’ll be a regular reader here from now on.
That’s a really good reminder, Jeff. In perspective, it’s a nice problem to have. And actually, depending on my mood, I often find the reaction of “writing is easy” to be humorous. At least, when I’m remembering not to take myself so seriously. 🙂
And welcome to the blog!
[…] at all. We feel obligated to be prickly about it because there is a wide-spread misconception that writing fiction is easy. But the more I write, the more I am coming to understand that the actual writing is a critical […]