Short Stories: October 24, 2018 Issue [#9187] |
This week: The Story Behind the Story Edited by: Kate - Writing & Reading More Newsletters By This Editor
1. About this Newsletter 2. A Word from our Sponsor 3. Letter from the Editor 4. Editor's Picks 5. A Word from Writing.Com 6. Ask & Answer 7. Removal instructions
What writer's block? You, writer, hold the key ~ unlock the story ~ just write it ~ one word at a time!
Greetings, I'm honored to be your guest host for this week's edition of the WDC Short Story Newsletter. Short stories are fun to write but often a challenge to present to readers. You don't want to tell them too much, but you want them to know your characters, enter your world of today or yesterday or someday. Let's explore several ways to show them in and bid them welcome to your world of words. |
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Greetings,
Remember back when you were a kid in school and you got to take something to school for 'show and tell.' You and some of your classmates sometimes had like items (a doll, a fire truck just like the one that rescued dad off the roof, skates, a Transformer, perhaps), but no two were the same. Because each had its own story, and you each shared it with your friends and classmates.
As we got older, we were taught to narrow our focus. We learned to respond to questions with succinct answers; to show what we knew, without telling how or why we knew it. Many of us, over time, perhaps forgot altogether to notice or seek the 'why' of things.
I submit that we, as writers, have an arrested development. We've not given up, or have recalled, the joy of searching, of questioning, and of sharing the journey behind the quest. We observe and explore, we imagine and postulate, then regale ourselves and our readers with the details of our journey. We do some 'telling.'
There are a lot of "How To" writing books and articles instruct us to 'show, don't tell' in order to keep our readers in the moment and grab their attention. When writing a chase scene, a gunfight, an alien to mortal brain transplant, yes, one needs to show the event unfold in real time to draw the reader viscerally into the story. But then, to hold your reader's attention, to make him/her want to stay for a time in the 'otherworld' you've created, I think you have to tell him the why of the chase or gunfight. To turn a scene into a story, you want to make the reader care about the 'why' of it. You've shown your reader the cherished item, now tell him/her why it's important or interesting.
As writers, one popular way we do this is with 'backstory'. We know the details behind our characters' actions; we know how the 'snapshots' derived from a sound or scent evolve to reach their full-screen resolution; we know what each of our characters does, looks like, thinks like, fears and hopes. We share with our readers only enough of this information to draw them into the story and make them understand why events are unfolding as they are, why characters act as they do, and make them want to know more. We don't want to give them everything, they don't need an information dump to distract them from the world we're creating for them with our story or poem. Your reader doesn't care, and doesn't need to know, what each character had for breakfast (unless perhaps poison is involved). In my example above, the kids in class didn't need to hear a distracting litany of the swear words dad used when his foot went through the old roof shingles. Those had nothing to do with the hook and ladder rescue; they didn't move the story along. Telling them that would not have shown why the toy fire truck was interesting or special.
When the details are important; when they draw the reader further into the story; when they show the 'why' of things, then a writer has several ways to 'tell' readers.
There are several ways we as writers 'tell' our readers things about our characters, ideas, our 'otherworld'; things that make him/her understand the why of things, and to make our reader empathize with a character, want to turn the page, join us for a time in the literary world we've created. But give no more than what's necessary (no litany or information dump), that the reader can follow the story.
Flashback - on the one hand, answers a question you've posed for your readers; tells them something in response to action that's taken place. It's an effective way of weaving history into your ongoing story. For example, Mike will not consider living in a house without a basement, one without a foundation. He becomes again the five year old running for the door his grandpa held open against the storm. His grandpa stopped smiling as the oak hit the trailer, mashing it, and his grandpa, into the unyielding ground.
Backstory through dialogue - is a dynamic way of engaging your readers, and give depth to the characters themselves. Conversation among characters is an effective way of telling why they are taking one action over another, foreshadowing events to come by alluding to events in the characters' past. It can be overt or subtle, proclaim deeds done or allude to the motive for what may occur.
Narrative - is another way that you can tell your readers something, either using your character's voice or your own author's omniscient voice. Your character can provide background, internal and external, for action taking place or perhaps yet to occur. Or, as the omniscient author, you can offer third-person narrative to explain the present by relating it to the past. "When we made the first campfire," grandpa begins, "the bears came to feast, and where once we were four, by dawn we were three."
Framing - is an effective way to give a 'narrator' (like 'grandpa' in my example above, depth of identity. Telling a story within the story, often recalling in first person events of the past, can give added relevance to events occurring in the opening story. Consider the cliche "Once upon a time," and how the story that follows is framed by the opening and then resolved with a message, a lesson, a quip, or by somehow changing the actions or beliefs of the characters in the opening story = it's a story within a story. Framing is also effective in explaining by action some tenets of a belief system or political or social mores. The characters in the original story are engaged with and changed by their encounter with the framed story.
So, don't be afraid to show - and tell - your readers your story. Each of the above techniques can be effective, used judiciously, to add that flavor to your story that will make your readers want to know more, make them want to enter more deeply into your world built of words.
Try it! Show them a bit of your 'otherworld', and tell your readers just enough to make them want to stay awhile.
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Take a few minutes and read a few stories here; see how the writers tell the story, how you can see it; share your thoughts then write one of your own
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Thank you for allowing me this visit in your virtual home. As a guest host, I don't have a formal ask and answer, so I offer for you a question.
What do you think is the future of short stories, with the current trend to e-publishing? Share your answer, along with a bitem link to a story of yours, and you may see a fewGPs coming your way .
Until we next meet I wish you good writing and some fun with your own show and telling
Write On!
Kate - Writing & Reading
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