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F. Scott Fitzgerald
in a letter to his daughter wrote, "A good style simply doesn't form
unless you absorb half a dozen topflight authors every year."
All writers must read not only to be entertained but to be instructed.
It is by reading that we learn to focus the fiction mind, framing incidents
and characters and places into a particular shape of imagery and economy
that makes a short story, a play, or a book.
The fiction writer's eye is not much different from a camera lens. We
eliminate extraneous detail, focus on a particular plane of a face or
a scene, then describe these by using all the senses at our command.
If we must lean upon only our own experiences, our work comes out as
shallow and dry as a piece of newspaper reporting. Who, What, When,
Where, and Why? Oh, no, fiction writing is more than cold facts. Fiction
writing, and I've learned this from reading, includes the flesh and
blood of humanity, all the glory of nature, and puts characters into
delightful or grave situations we deem important to the story we are
writing.
Since childhood, I've read everything I could get my hands on. From
books, fiction and nonfiction, I've learned techniques of successful
writing: the use of dialogue, the description of place, how to characterize,
how to turn an original metaphor or simile. I've learned that literature
has three dimensions: breadth, depth, and elevation. Breadth comes from
our experience, but also recognition that this experience is shared
with other writers. Depth, is understanding and is limited only by the
inquiring mind and energy of the writer. Elevation is the distance we
travel with our subject matter--its meaning, its symbolism, the larger
and wider view from which we may survey all that has been done before.
In reading I've found that I can discover springboards that fire my
own imagination in ways never before thought of. Some passage by Hemingway
or Fitzgerald or Mary Higgins Clark, or Dean Koontz can suddenly spark
an energy in my mind that allows the words to flow in a torrent of prose
that is my own yet inspired by others.
Hallie and Whit Burnett in their book, FICTION WRITER'S HANDBOOK
(Harper & Row) say that writers must read and read some more, so
that your bloodstream is charged by the alcohol of fiction and you
come, at last, to feel and see and believe in the visions that fill
your head.
Too many of us confine our reading to the bestseller lists. We forget
that in the mid-list areas there are great writers who simply do not
have the publicity they deserve to get their works out to the people.
Stroll through a book store, look for intriguing titles by authors you've
never read. Read a few pages, see if this author might have a bit of
magic to send your way. Some special knowledge of turning a commonplace
thing into something that sparkles like champagne.
As for the classic notables: I have learned much from reading Fitzgerald,
Edgar Allan Poe, Truman Capote, D. H. Lawrence, Isak Dinesen, Joyce
Carol Oates, Jane Austen, Philip Roth, Eudora Welty, George Orwell,
James Michener, Hemingway, and William Faulkner and Thomas Wolfe, William
Styron, and one of my favorites, Somerset Maugham. Today's authors like
John Jakes, Herman Wouk, Pat Conroy, and Gore Vidal are true inspirations
in their genres.
Also, I've found many helps in the works of Mary Higgins Clark, Nora
Roberts, Margaret Moseley, and twenty or thirty other contemporary authors
who've taught me wondrous things I'd never thought about in my quest
to become a fiction writer.
Writers should read because unless they experience the works of others
they may never be able to write anything of value in such a way that
readers will want to read their words. Writing is not easy as some would
have you believe. Writing is hard work, it is a business, and it comes
from so deep within that it may take years of reading and learning before
anyone is successful. We must assimilate, not emulate, others' works.
No one can teach you to write. Novels, short stories, biographies, nonfiction
works, they can show you how others do it and why certain forms are
used, certain phrases work when others do not. A writing teacher does
not actually teach writing, he or she inspires you, the writer, to reach
down inside of yourself and pull up those emotions that evolve into
a bit of writing that is true to your own potential.
Do I still read? Does the sun still come up in the East? I've spent
almost ten years being a literary critic in order to read all the best
books available. Does my own work sound or look like some other author's?
I should hope not. The fiction and nonfiction I've read gathers in my
mind and presents me with a world of skills, dreams and possibilities.
They open my writer's soul to the realization that all things are possible
in fiction, and not all nonfiction needs to follow a formula.
In conclusion, if you would be a writer, there is a prerequisite, you
must become a reader. A reader who learns and retains the infinite details
of pure writing. Only then do you dare to let your muse fly free to
express in your own vision the stories collecting in your mind's eye.
Copyright
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, 2000
Patricia Ann Jones' nonfiction articles have been published locally, regionally,
and nationally. She's been a book critic for the Tulsa Sunday World newspaper
for the past eleven years. She also leads a weekly writers' workshop on
AOL's Career's and Work. Many of the members in Daytime Writers' Group
have published nonfiction as well as short stories and novels. Read all
of Patricia's PERCEPTIONS articles at www.businessknowhow.com.
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