Writing Lesson 3

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We destroyed the passive language scourge in the first lesson. We went over the “show don’t tell rule” on the second go. If that rule seems confusing, it’s only because it has many facets. It’s really as simple as it sounds…it just has endless applications.

Tonight, we shall invigorate the adorably charged synapses of our gooey gray brains, with a discourse on metaphors and similes.

Just a quick refresher – a simile is a sort of comparison, referring to one thing by talking about another (your big clue, in a simile, is the word “like”):

“I will seek out redemption like a coke fiend’s blistering tongue searches for the last contaminated grain.”

A metaphor, drops the comparison, the first item is the second item:

“His black hole eyes swallowed light and joy from all he surveyed.”

As a very general storytelling rule, metaphors are superior to similes. Word’s like “like” stop a reader and remind them, for a second, that they are reading. The smoother transition of metaphors keeps a reader immersed. And there is something more strangely or abstractly interesting, when the thing compared, simply exists as the second thing…it’s more poetic somehow. As Virgil would say to Dante, “We are now entering the sightless zone.” We are entering those areas of writing that don’t have hard and fast explanations as to why certain things work…it’s subjective. Watch your footing.

But something about metaphors is better. Take a look. In my short story, “The Halloween Tree,” I wrote this sentence:

“My memories fluttered in my head, like bats afraid of the light.”

Kind of a cool image, I thought. But some of my peers suggested changing it into a metaphor. I groaned…but did the work, and came up with this:

“Bat-winged recollections flutter in my head, afraid of the light.”

Read the two sentences out loud. The second flows better. And let that be a lesson. Part of your drafting process should be, after finishing any draft, to read it out loud to yourself, as if you have an audience (or even get an audience). Half the stuff that you realize you need to fix, gets noticed when the words hit your vocal chords.

The image is also more sophisticated. Instead of, “yeah…my memories are kind of like bats…isn’t that cool?” No! My memories ARE bats, every image bubble of my collective recollections has membrane wings. It’s more surreal. It’s a hell-of-a-lot cooler.

Subjective rules have endless exceptions. Sometimes it just sounds right to write a simile. Sometimes it sounds more natural in speech. For example – noir detective stories are filled with great similes (usually in hard boiled voice overs). So, if you were writing something with that flavor, you might do well to fill in a lot of similes: “The dame was bad, all bad. She used men like cigarettes, taking one too many drags before smearing them to ashes.”

Similes have there place. But, go through your story. Look at your “likes” and see how you might go about making them metaphors. In that process, just like when you force yourself to follow any other rule or limitation, will force some interesting sentences out of you that you didn’t know you had.

Couldn’t decide if I was a MURDER OF ONE or a CROW LEFT OF THE MURDER…but here it goes…

Describe yourself using one band and song titles from that band

Created by naw5689 and taken 24377 times on bzoink!

Choose a band/artist and answer only in song TITLES by that band: Counting Crows
Are you male or female: Mr. Jones
Describe yourself: A Murder of One
How do some people feel about you: “Good Time” and “Colorblind’
How do you feel about yourself: I’m Not Sleeping
Describe your ex girlfriend/boyfriend: Butterfly in Reverse
Describe your current girlfriend/boyfriend: Walkaways (see “Murder of One”)
Describe where you want to be: New Frontier
Describe what you want to be: “Daylight Fading” and “Rain King”
Describe how you live: Children in Bloom
Describe how you love: Up All Night
Share a few words of wisdom Have you seen me lately?

Create a Survey | Search Surveys | Go to bzoink!

So I says to the Blair Witch, “Bitch, I gotsta be joggin’ my third set!”

Wow. Partially from getting an early start, and partially from cloud cover, this morning’s run was DARK. Black. Dark side of the moon black. The road down to the peninsula and the lake, is off the main road and under the cover of big oak trees, the kind of dark that you see things in. But the need to sleep makes you go forward. It was like Chariots of Fire meets Blair Witch.

But the road to running leads to, not only less gut, but inspiration. I had thoughts for two short stories. One I jotted down in notes. The other I just wrote out now. Well, not a full story really, just an idea about a character, or more specifically, what it would be like to sense what this character senses during his work…

WRAITH HUNTING BY DIGITAL MUSIC

Neil hunted ghosts. But he never did it without his MP3 player. He set the volume to full, music pounding, as he crept along the boards that, up until now, creaked. Loud obnoxious music, he listened to young, obnoxious music. Well…he was young and obnoxious…but he knew he’d be listening to this music long after he was young. The music should be irreverent and audacious on an errand like this. He set his thermal goggles to power, and the dingy walls disappeared to cool blues and greens, punctuated by warm reds and oranges. He crept through the house, looking for the things creeping after him.

“How can you do that,” a colleague once asked, “shut off your senses when you know there is something after you?”

A wraith hunter who relied on his senses was fucked. The things between the walls, under the beds, and from Hell used your senses against you. That’s not how you found them.

Music and thermal spectrums dulled the horror.

Somehow, the sound of baby screams choked in clotted blood seemed less horrific, when drowned out by the relentless urging of Led Zeppelin and “Kashmir.” He knew they were making those sounds now, horrible squeals, dins, and whippoorwill wails, just out of the reach of his earphones.

Somehow, the sight of an old man hanging from a noose of barbed wire, while swallowing his own intestines, failed to tear away one’s sanity, when they were just indecipherable blotches of color – ancient video games. Neil knew they were making those grotesque visions and manifestations now, as he saw several blotches and shapes dancing around him.

The mad, jabbering things hungered for sensation. They wanted to taste blood, bathe in vital fluids, feel naked organs between their toes. They wanted to drink fear…but Neil deafened and blinded himself to all their chthonic tools.

He liked to imagine how frustrated this made the spirits of sin and hate.

Neil had to wait. Wait until their frustration drove them to action, made them mad enough to come out of the walls and take those sensations from his flesh directly.

Next track.

Nick Made a Freudian Slip and Oedipus Took the Case

So Wil came down, gave me back my inquisitor’s guide book on hunting witches (which I’ll hopefully use on a History paper I have to write). We then went and did a little short story workshoping over at a local bar called Bootleggers (incidentally, last time Nick was down here, he could not remember the name of that bar and said, “Sweet. Are we going to that bar, what’s it called…Logjammers?”).

Ok…this is flippin’ hilarious. Someone put up this website that gives these couple-paragraph summaries of each of the Lord of the Rings books, for students who don’t want to read the whole mess for class…‘cause the internet is the place kids can go and get a quick synopsis. Only this person messes up the synopsis in subtle and very thorough ways, mixing events and messing up names. Someone who never read the book might be fooled, but any teacher would realize that the kid did not read a thing. What a wicked prank! Check it out.

And finally, I was starting to think that Raven Magazine was all but a hoax, as the February issue never came out and I lost contact. But…it appears, according to some news stories I read, that they had some trouble with the postal service, who said the magazine needed to be rapped in opaque packaging, for them to ship it. So they lost a few months getting the mags back an repacking. And, indeed, I just got an email from the editor asking for my home address to send a copy to. Hopefully this means money is coming soon!

That’ll mean “Poe Goes to the Singles Bar” will have a home and, with “Teddy Bear Rex” published in ELM (soon I think), I’ll have a little more bulk to my publishing credits (because the Masters degree doesn’t really mean anything on that plane of existence). Hopefully I’ll get some more out there soon.

Sin City has me inspired to go back and finish an idea that I started, but never fully fleshed out…of turning Oedipus Rex into a noir/detective story. It works. It’s a mystery with a nasty twist. Thebes is supposed to be a crime ridden and violent city – why not fill it with Tommy-guns and fedoras? I’ve already turned Oedipus into a Teddy-Bear (“Teddy Bear Rex”) as well as a day time talk show guest (“The Complex”) and turned the Sphinx riddle game into a radio contest that kills people (“The Riddle”)…why not make old Ed a PI? Of course, I’ll then have quite a collection of Oedipus Rex/variant short stories. Maybe I should just write a few more and make a book out of it. Maybe title it……….I WANT MY MOMMY: short stories featuring Oedipus Rex

Man…my new car can fit a ton of bodies in the trunk!

“Writing is flying in dreams
When you remember. When you can. When it works.
It’s that easy.”
-Neil Gaiman

How sweet it is.

Severe lack of weekend sleep forced me to fling my alarm clock away, this morning, and by the time I slithered out of bed, my rejected clock and the darkening air told me it was after seven pm. I drove out for some errands and, on the road, something hit me. Hard. I swerved into the next lane and made the turn into Barnes & Noble, bought a coffee, sat at a table, and wrote straight till closing. After an hour and a half of work, I had (in bits and pieces) most of a short story. And it’s good 🙂

Oh giggle, giggle, cackle and wriggle, did that feel good!

Backwards. I had been trying to do things backwards lately. Things felt off. I tried to right them, halting my writing, trying to feel right in order to write (this is a seductive and BS strategy). I was trying to feel right, in order to do…when all I had to do, was do, in order to feel right.

When we don’t do the thing we are supposed to do, things congeal, rigor mortis sets in. All pains become magnified. But when I do that thing, everything else falls away; everything else is easy; everything else is unimportant; everything rolls off me.

It’s better than sex.

Sometimes, I like it better than being loved.

The Pleasure of My Company

I have wheels! Tonight I went on a for-no-particular-reason mini road trip to places unknown, directions random. Then I found my way back. It’s not a convertible, but the freedom felt great, complete with loud music (since the radio works, I can use my MP3 player), and rolled down windows.

I found much to entertain me – me, myself, and I singing and driving, a return to my old self and half grinned feelings of self reliance, and what a relief to go back to that – the security of knowing that as long as I have me to entertain myself, I’ll be just fine.

This contrast made me certain, now, of what I suspected before – that the depressing funk of a few weeks back, was all in my head and had nothing to do with events surrounding me. My brain was fucking with me (and not in the good, multi-positional way). It didn’t mater what was, or wasn’t happening to me, my mind would have used any fodder against me that it could find. If one thing wasn’t there, it would use another. Change the scenario a thousand ways and I’d have felt exactly the same in each.

Call it a chemical imbalance, an alignment of humors or whatever…it’s balanced now (or at least…it’s back to it’s original, happy imbalance). In fact…it’s with some trouble that I can even remember why I felt that way – even the remembrance of the feeling itself tumbles away like a vague dream. It all seems distant and I feel detached looking at it. Something to point out to anyone who might have felt that they had anything to do with said funk (though I think I talked to everyone who might have felt like that…so it doesn’t really matter).

And what a loooooooooooooooooooooooong weekend, all on four total hours of sleep. Before I slip into a coma, let me recall:

Friday
I worked. I sat in my room. Not too much to tell. Still no car.

Saturday
Vllad Tepes feasted among his impaled victims on this day in 1459.

I did not manage to fall asleep on Friday night and Nick picked me up Saturday morning. We went to my old car, got the license plates, drove back to Eureka, picked up Rich, and made our way to Chicago. Nick and Rich auditioned in the city. The movie was very ghetto. We left. Drove to my grandmother’s house. I got my new car. The top doesn’t come off, but it is reliable and I’m glad for the freedom it represents.

We drove back to Bloomington. Nick and I went to a LARP game. Exhausted, we then went to a midnight showing of Sin City. The movie was fantastic. It was less a narrative story and less a group of characters – and more a demonstration of noir genre and walking/talking character archetypes. It was the pulp/noir genre’s nightmare of itself, on steroids. It worked.

Back to Eureka. I got the only four hours sleep of my weekend, and then drove back to Springfield on…

Sunday
This day marks the return of Persephone from the Underworld.
Daylight savings time.

What an ironic day to come back with a car, after my old one, Persephone, had died…and apparently gone to Hades. After my drive, I went to work, then to rehearsals. Now just a few more loose ends and then to bed.

Oh…screw the loose ends…I got to crash now…

Writing Lesson #2

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Writing Lesson #1 concluded, we’ll move on. First however, a note on writing “rules” and “guidelines.” There are always exceptions to such loose rules. But it’s good to learn them, to understand the exceptions. In the recent Troy picture, Achilles and his younger cousin (who he is training) spar in a mock swordfight. At the opportune moment, Achilles switches sword hands and defeats his pupil. The younger man looks confused and says, “But you told me to never switch sword hands.” Achilles smiles, saying, “When you master that sword you won’t be taking advice from me.” Same principal here. You don’t learn the rules to be beholden to them, but to be free of them. In grade school, in high school, I learned what made up a proper sentence. Now my fiction is filled with sentence fragments. But I know why they are there and…if there is no reason, they are replaced with the sentences I learned how to make.

Moving on…

SHOW DON’T TELL

If “no passive language” is a basic rule of strong writing, “show don’t tell” is a basic rule of strong storytelling. It’s a very simple idea, but you will struggle with all it’s possibilities for the rest of your storytelling careers. Always go back over a draft and see what you can change from a “tell” to a “show.”

tell:
“Nick walked into the room. He was angry. He was angry because Josh drank all his rum and the bottle was empty now.”

show:
“Nick stomped up to Josh, white knuckles squeezing the now empty bottle.”

The first set of sentences directly tells things to the audience that can be insinuated through better storytelling (they are also sinfully redundant). The second example uses a stronger verb, and the audience sees things that let them know Nick is angry.

Sometimes, showing is a matter of finding unnecessary adjectives, and finding ways of illustrating them without clumsily stopping a story’s flow with the types of character descriptions and exposition that belongs in an outline or treatment (not the story itself).

Other times, it’s a good rule for dialogue. People talk in circles, rarely straight lines. Listen. Direct statements are few and far between. Sometimes this is out of deceit. More often, people politely circle something or find it easier to indirectly say things that are of a painful nature. Most often, people communicate on many levels and need not directly say complete ideas to get the message across (especially when talking with people they know). Go through dialogue and see what you can take out and insinuate with fewer words. It’ll likely flow better, more natural.

Treat first person stories like dialogue (many of them are…the character talks to an unknown person, a friend, a psychiatrist, a tape recorder, etc…). You can insinuate things without spelling them out.

For example, I wrote a story where a character is tracking…something, across the US. He doesn’t rest and he’s suffering sleep deprivation and he’s not all too sure what is hallucination and what is supernatural. I could write a paragraph that spells it all out and tells all…

Tell:
“I’ve been driving for a long time. I’m suffering serious sleep deprivation. The stops just fly by. I’m not sure where I am. I don’t know who I am. I feel disoriented. I think I’m in Illinois. I pull into a gas station and fill up my tank and purshase a cola and a paper. The paper says that the police found four more dead prostitutes. I must be on the right track in catching that thing.”

That paragraph is tedious and telling. What I actually wrote, contains very few direct statements on the protagonist’s state of mind. I thought the story was better served with flashes of sensory input, placing the reader behind the protagonists eyes, rather than making them the recipients of a second hand account. Why tell the audience that the narrator is disoriented, when I can, instead, make the very text disorienting. So the story began thus:

“The white lines whip by in whippoorwill laughter. They know where they’re going. I don’t.

White lines.

Brights.

Hazard.

Refuel, buy a cola, use the bathroom. This is the pattern. This is my existence.

White lines.

Moonlight.

Reduced Speed Zone.

Gas is ten cents cheaper. Cola is forty cents more. A paper says four more prostitutes were found dead last night. I’m on the right trail.

White lines.

Red lights.

Deer crossing.

What state am I in? The license plates say Illinois. Who am I? The license plates refuse to say.”

Much better. The ambiguity (a whole different subject in and of itself) heightens the suspense of stories. Ambiguity is good.

Here’s another sample paragraph. This first one, however, is the “show” paragraph:

“Mascara oozes down Celina’s cheek, painting depression. Mutely witnessing her tears repose a multitude of exercise videos, magazines promising easy beauty secrets, and bottles of diet pills of questionable effect and healthiness. The bath water is warm, the razor fills her hand, and a note explaining all sits at her desk.”

It’s likely you understand what is going on here. However, I never say the word “cry” or mention that this character has low self esteem stemming from self image problems. I never even say the word “suicide”. The paragraph is much more emotionally poignant than say:

“Celina was crying and the tears ran down her cheek, messing up her mascara. She looked in the mirror. She didn’t like herself, thought she was too overweight. She never seemed to look like the women in the magazines, no matter how many products, pills, and devices she tried. She ran a warm bath and found her razor, planning on committing suicide. Then she placed a suicide note, that she had written earlier, on the desk.”

Here I spell everything out. It sounds accurate, but clunky. I get the same info across in the first paragraph, even without saying “suicide.” I can do that by pressing certain levers of reaction that readers have. We come from a similar culture and I know what images and sense input will make them think “suicide.” Always look for the levers and strings.

SHOW DON’T TELL. Make that you motto. Keep it in mind when you write…but most especially keep it in mind when you go back for a new draft. Showing involves much more finesse as a storytelling form.

Never mind your boy’s potty training…my girl can pound down vermin!

“From childhood’s hour I have not been
As others were; I have not seen
As others saw; I could not bring
My passions from a common spring.
From the same source I have not taken
My sorrow; I could not awaken
My heart to joy at the same tone;
And all I loved, I loved alone.”
-Edgar Allan Poe, “Alone”

Strange…this poem that is stuck in my head, tonight, is strangely absent from my Complete Tales and Poems of Poe. The other night, Lenore graduated to full, adult mice. I was worried that she would be unable to get one down…so she laughed at my doubt by eating two. Oh…they grow up so fast! Before I know it, it’ll be rats and rabbits and then the pitter patter of little slithers can’t be far behind.

“Then–in my childhood, in the dawn
Of a most stormy life–was drawn
From every depth of good and ill
The mystery which binds me still:
From the torrent, or the fountain,
From the red cliff of the mountain,
From the sun that round me rolled
In its autumn tint of gold,
From the lightning in the sky
As it passed me flying by,
From the thunder and the storm,
And the cloud that took the form
(When the rest of Heaven was blue)
Of a demon in my view.”
-Edgar Allan Poe, “Alone”

“ONE BY ONE
THE PENGUINS
STEAL MY SANITY”
-a postcard stuck to my wall

Writing Lesson #1

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Attention word weavers. Let’s do some writing lessons. In part, as a reminder to myself – and in part, because several people, as of late, have given me bits of their written work to comment on – I thought it would be easier to put some of the more common advice here. This stuff is basic. But, in this craft/art, basic doesn’t mean least important. No, no. These are the overlooked bricks on which word castles tumble to the crushing surf of jaded editors’ trash cans below. As a writer, you will not make yourself “professional” with fancy tricks, however, you can make yourself seem amateurish by ignoring the basics.

PASSIVE LANGUAGE
This is it. Ground zero. Every other bit of writing wisdom gets stacked on this one thing. But it gets ignored so often. The good news is, if you fix this, you’ll see results immediately. Running this single comb through your drafts will make your writing noticeably better.

Tear out your passive language. These are the verbs that are tired and don’t do a lot. I’ve already used a bunch of them just typing this much. Words like: are, is, would, will, be (or worse…“will be”), were, am, was, etc.

These things piss off editors. They bore readers (even if the reader is not consciously aware of it).

You should always try and find more active, more vivid verbs.

“Josh was running.”

“Was” (and all of its flaccid brothers and sisters) is an unnecessary verb. It’s fat. Make like Lorena Bobbit and cut it off! Now! These are the verbs that mean “to be,” that is, “to exist.” Based on the physics of our universe (which you will follow, more or less, even if you write the wildest of Science Fiction stories) if Josh is running…then Josh exists. You don’t need to tell the reader this.

“Josh ran.”

That is a much crisper sentence. “Ran” is a much more interesting verb than “was.” Don’t bury your verbs under dead language just to tell your readers that your subjects exist. They already know.

“I am successful.”
“I succeed!”

“Joshua was being attacked by the evil penguins in his head.”

That sentence fucking blows! Notice, I didn’t say, “That sentence is blowing.” I said it “fucking blows.” That’s active. It fucking blows rancid chunks. That’s descriptive. In the semi-autobiographical sentence about evil mind penguins, I not only burried “attacked” under “was”…but I make the subject of the sentence the object of the real action. Don’t do that. “Joshua was attacked,” is better…but still passive, Josh is still having something done to him. Having something done is less interesting than doing. You can fix this by making the aggressor the subject…or making the original subject react more vividly. So…

“The evil penguins of the mind pecked and scratched Joshua.”
or
“Joshua slammed his head into the wall, to stop the pecking of the evil mind penguins.”

Notice how my new sentences were not only corrected, but elaborated? This is the other benefit of following these basic rules, they force a challenge upon you – the challenge forces you to come up with things you would not otherwise have thought of (much like self imposed rules a poet might assign herself for a given poem).

Even if a verb is not technically passive, they can usually be improved upon. Go over your sentences and see if you can use a stronger verb.

“Jimmy walked through the room, looking for women.”

Not bad. At least I didn’t say, “The women were being looked for by Jimmy” (barf!). But “walked,” while an active verb, is kind of bland. It’s the most basic locomotive verb…no flavor. Let’s try…

“Jimmy sloped through the room, eyes hungry for skirt wearing treats.”

Much better. “Sloped” sounds cooler and is a more descriptive verb. Notice how it puts a more specific context to the sentence. It makes Jimmy more animalistic, wolf-like. It inspired me to improve the next part of the sentence. Now, he’s not just looking, his eyes are “hungry.” Jimmy turns much more sinister, just by sloping instead of walking. Had I gone with the original sentence, I’d have to spend a whole other sentence (or two) telling the audience that Jimmy is unsavory. But why tell when you can show…with one sentence (one verb).

OK…three tricks are a good start. (1)Get rid of passive verbs (especially the incestuous family of “to be”). (2)Never have an action “being done” to something…just have the aggressor do. (3)Always look for more vivid verbs. These are of course guidelines at best (there are no rules in creative mediums). Some sentences are just going to have “was” in them. But…take out an old short story, improve those three things (it’ll take you ten minutes) and your story will be many times better. Oh…see…I just used passive language…sorry…I mean: Your stories shall howl in clearer tones.