For Authors: December 13, 2023 Issue [#12310] |
This week: The Tale of the Persnickety Aunt Edited by: Max Griffin š³ļøāš More Newsletters By This Editor
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There are three rules for writing a novel. Unfortunately, no one knows what they are.
--W. Somerset Maugham
Fiction reveals truth that reality obscures.
--Ralph Waldo Emerson
However great a man's natural talent may be, the act of writing cannot be learned all at once.
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The other day, I attended a forum sponsored by our local Metropolitan Library for āauthors and aspiring authors.ā As these things go, it was pretty good. One of the speakersāon editingāwas a professor of writing at a local college. She opened her talk by asking us for questions that she might answer during her remarksāan interesting technique, and rather daring, too. Iām not sure Iād be prepared to ad lib a talk based on off-the-wall questions from the audience. You never know what they might come up with, like, say, the one I asked. But what got my attention was the way she answered one question in particular.
The Question
One of the participants, a published author, said he was working on a novel in which the plot called for one of the characters to make an unexpected choice. He wanted the choice to be surprising, but also to be one that, when it happened, readers would slap their foreheads and think I should have seen that coming.
Instead of giving possible techniques to accomplish this, the speaker told this story about her mother.
The Tale of the Mother and the Persnickety Aunt
All her lifeāor at least as long the speaker could rememberāher mother had been the family peace-maker. Whether at home, or with the extended family, or just in social gatherings, she was always the one to smooth over differences. She was always all about harmony. I was thinking āclassic conflict avoidance,ā but then I tend to be cynical.
She went on to describe another family member, an aunt, who always had to be right and who loved conflict. For example, if she asked you if you wanted a cookie and you said āyes,ā then sheād say, āItāll make you fat.ā On the other hand, if you said āno,ā then sheād say, āAre you afraid itāll make you fat?ā No matter what you answered, she was right and you were wrong. Charming. But then, weāve all known people like this, which makes the persnickety aunt memorable.
There came a day when her motherās beloved, if a bit quirky, brother went to his heavenly reward. Her brother, it seems, was an Oklahoma good old boy. He always wore bib overalls, flannel shirts, and cowboy boots. They were even his Sunday-go-to-meeting clothes. No doubt this appalled the persnickety aunt.
For his funeral, the speakerās mother wanted to dress him as he would have chosen, in his cherished overalls and favorite red flannel shirt. The aunt, ever eager for conflict, insisted they purchase a suit and tie and dress him properly.
For the first time in anyoneās memory, the speakerās mother didnāt back down. She fought tooth and nail to dress her brother the way he would have dressed himself, not the way the aunt wanted him to dress.
The speaker told us that, at first, she couldnāt understand why her Mother acted in such an uncharacteristic manner. Even her father paced back and forth in the family parlor, she said, in a quandary over this strange behavior.
But the speaker finally realized that her mother acted this way because, for the first time ever, the outcome of a conflict mattered.
Why This Answered the Question
After telling the story, the speaker said, "Next question?"
That was it: her answer. In fact, not only was it a good answer, it was a brilliant ad lib response to the question.
Her answer is certainly better than the author jibber-jabber I would have given in response to that question. Her answer was an example, and showing is always stronger than telling.
Still, the mathematician in me yearns for that jibber jabber, so here it comes, like it or not.
Kurt Vonnegut said that every character should want something, even if itās just a glass of water. All characters should have goals. The goals should matter: something bad should happen if the character doesnāt achieve their goal. That establishes the stakes. Thereās no story unless the character also must overcome obstacles in pursuing their goal.
Goals and obstacles are in opposition, which gives rise to conflict. Because of the stakes, the outcome of that conflict matters. This gives rise to tension, the engine that drives the story. To add rising tension, authors can deepen the goals, raise the stakes, or increase the obstacles. The tension peaks at the climax where it finally releases with the characterās success--or failure--in achieving their goal.
Now consider the story of the mother and the persnickety aunt. The story tells us that family harmony is one of the motherās enduring goals. If we were writing a short story, instead of telling this, weād instead show it, revealing it through her words and deeds. Since itās central to the dilemma she faces in the story, weād show at least two incidents prior to the final arugment. Two establish a pattern, and the expectation of how sheāll act in the third incident when the persnickety aunt insists āno overalls, suit.ā
But the mother has a second goal: honoring the memory of her beloved brother. Again, in a short story, weād show this goal as well, in the same way, with two incidents.
Both sets of repeated incidents not only establish patterns, they foreshadow the events at the climax, when the mother stands up to the persnickety aunt.
The day of the fight over the overalls finally arrives. Whatās the conflict? At first glance, it looks like itās the fight between the mother and the aunt. But itās more than that. The real conflictāthe conflict that reveals how the story answers the original questionāis in the motherās heart. She has two conflicting goals: being true to her brotherās memory, or retaining a harmonious relationship with the aunt. She canāt have both, since the aunt has to always be right. Each goal is the obstacle for the other. Her choice between the goals is the source of tension in the story, and itās released when she chooses her brother.
Conclusion
Goals, stakes, and obstacles. Tension rising. Two-to-make-a-pattern, three-to-break-it. Foreshadowing. Those are the ways I would have answered the question. Jibber jabber.
The tale of the mother and the persnickety aunt is way better.
I know it's only December 13th, but I don't have another newsletter until January, so I'm going to wish all my readers a mathematical Happy Holidays now. I know: more jibber jabber.
I case you're viewing this on a phone, here's a lower-resolution version of the above composite that doesn't split into two pieces.
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