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September 14, 2006

13 Ways of Looking at the Novel

I was in a low period when Jane Smiley's mammoth book 13 Ways of Looking at the Novel arrived on hold at the library, just the antidote I needed. You'd have thought Jane came over to keep me company, cheering me with her chatty and thoughtful style, and reminding me of what makes me giddy about novels. So here are:

13 things I Learned from Jane Smiley

1. Novel writing "most often grows out of a compulsive habit of reading as a child."

Undoubtably, we were reading for all the wrong reasons--escape, pleasure, avoidance of responsibilities and human contact. We were reading because it was easy and fun and we were unsupervised. We were reading to find companions more congenial than those around us. We wanted to fill our heads with nonsense and tune out practical considerations. We were not, most likely, athletic or useful sorts of children. We were reluctant to help around the house or to go outside and play. We did not have very good manners, because in numerous ways to be cited later, reading books is deleterious to good manners. We did not have good sleep habits, because if we had, we would not have read under the bedcovers with a flashlight, or held the book up to the moon that shone through the window, and ruined our eyes. We were reading because we had two lives, an inner life and an outer life, and they were equally important to us and equally vivid.

2. Every novel has five essential elements: "A novel is a (1) lengthy, (2) written, (3) prose, (4) narrative with a (5) protagonist."

Every novel has all of these elements. If any of them is missing, the literary form in question is not a novel. All additional characteristics--characters, plot, themes, setting, style, point of view, tone, historical accuracy, philosophical profundity, revolutionary or revelatory effect, pleasure, enlightenment, transcendence, and truth--grow out of the ironclad relationships among these five elements.
3. Originality in a novel is guaranteed, so strive for truth and interest.

Some writers are afraid of research, thinking perhaps it will contaminate their ideas, but the strangest fact about the novel ("novel" means "new or original") is that novelty and originality are automatic. What is difficult is not to write something new but to write something interesting and true. As any piece becomes interesting and true, it becomes original. On the other hand, many original pieces of writing never find readers because they are solipsistic, tedious, tendentious, or self-indulgent. To pursue truth and interest is much more productive than to pursue originality, which will happen in any case.

4. The length of novels requires that writing become a habit.

. . . the absolutely minimal, simplest, easiest way of writing can accumulate a book as well as the most dedicated, self-conscious, ascetic way. Some novelists write by obligation, others by desire. These are questions of temperament. There is no intrinsically better way, since the only standard of achievement to begin with (and for quite a long time) is the accumulation of pages. Another thing both Beckerman and Proust show you is that writing is writing, not planning. The sooner you put words on paper, the happier you will be.

5. Press ahead with your first draft until it is complete.

. . . every rough draft, by being complete, is perfect. For this reason, I advise against rewriting, except for grammar and clarity, until you have the whole arc of the novel complete. The desire to get each scene "just right" works against productivity because it allows you to get in the habit of ruminating upon your self-doubts. . . .

You can follow [the model of Victorian serial writers] by setting aside the tendency to second-guess yourself. Each day, you sit down to your work, reread what you wrote the day before, correct the spelling and untangle thoughts you no longer understand. If there is a sequence of actions that is unclear, fix it as best you can and then go on. Do not worry about finding newer, righter words. Do not worry about fixing major problems of setting or character or theme. Do not make things more complex. Use rereading and fiddling with details to orient yourself in your text and get on with it.

6. Don't be too harsh with your rough draft.

After you read your rough draft over, you will be tempted to judge it rather than analyze it, but your task is above all an analytical one. It is not for you to decide whether, for example, it is "publishable." How could you know? Many novels you have read and enjoyed might not be publishable in today's world. Whether your novel is publishable is, for you, an imponderable, so my advice is to avoid the occasion of sin and try to put this question out of your mind. You have made your commitment; now make the most of it. You will also try to decide whether it is good. Let me answer that for you--it is, but it can be better, and your job in rewriting it is to make it better.

7. Even experienced writers have moments when they don't know what they're doing.

Jane (I gotta call her Jane, to maintain the illusion that she's my buddy) had written numerous novels when she hit a wall with Good Faith--

One day I waited for inspiration, got some, went off in a completely new direction, then had second thoughts the next day and tried something new. This was a symptom, indeed, a symptom that I didn't know what in the world I was doing, and it was way too late in the game for that. My heart sank. No, my flesh turned to ice. No, my eyes popped out of my head. No, my stomach churned. No, all I did was close the file on my computer and walk away. But that was very bad.

8. There comes a time to stop rewriting.

How do you know if you are finished? The first step here is to know yourself. Are you a dissatisfied perfectionist who tends to overdo everything? Or are you a careless sort who loses interest after the first rush of energy? Novels are long projects, and are more difficult to write if you go about it unsystematically. The reader wants both the finished surface and the energy simultaneously, all through the book. Your rewriting should promote both.

9. If you enjoy the writing process, you are less vulnerable to the successes and failures of the finished work.

The key to my survival as a novelist was not only my general cluelessness as to the meaning of these events [publishing mishaps with her first novel, Barn Blind], it was also that I had enjoyed writing Barn Blind no matter what the critics said or what happened to it in the big world, and I was well into writing my next novel by the time Barn Blind was published. I laugh at Barn Blind's misadventures now, but I laughed at them then, too. The great thing, as Henry James would say, is to do that rough draft, recognizing it as your first experience of "the incomparable luxury of the artist."

10. I have a great literary birthday (September 24).

The end of September is a great time to have a birthday if you want to be a writer. Jane Austen might be December 16 and Shakespeare April 23 and Charles Dickens February 9, but for a sheer run of greatness, I challenge anyone to match September 23 through September 30--F. Scott Fitzgerald, William Faulkner, T.S. Eliot, Marina Tsvetayeva, William Blake, and Miguel Cervantes. And, I used to add (to myself, of course), moi.

11. Jane Smiley loved writing Horse Heaven as much as I loved reading it.

And then came Horse Heaven, which was, for me, book heaven. I had successfully combined my two obsessions, and the result was pure joy every day. As far as I was concerned the book had only one flaw, that its composition ended far too soon, and I had to go on to something else. Whatever the lasting virtues of the book are (and I am no judge, especially of that one), it was perfectly suited to me and my sensibility. It was funny and poignant by turns, it had a large cast, it was written in the omniscient third person (which allowed stylistic exuberance), and it had horses in every chapter except one.

12. It's okay if you don't enjoy reading every single novel, even if they're classics.

Jane didn't care much for Leo Tolstoy, or Nathaniel Hawthorne, or William Makepeace Thackery. And she didn't like Henry James, his "prissy, domineering manner" and the way he called himself "the Master."

My preferences on the list do what preferences always do--they make an outline of who I am, depict me as a reader and as a person. But, I think, they are transitory preferences, as preferences in novels almost always are.

13. I am a novelist.

The reason I filed this entry under "Finding Your Material" is because this book made me realize that while I enjoy and appreciate many forms, poetry and short stories among them, as both a writer and reader I am a devotee of the novel.

A novelist is a compleat generalist--he depicts as much as he can of what is around him. If he were more of a specialist, he wouldn't be a novelist, he would have a field of study (if he were more a specialist of words, he would be a poet). If he were more a generalist, he wouldn't be a novelist, he would be a roving bore, spouting theories to anyone who couldn't get away fast enough. A novelist is on the cusp between someone who knows everything and someone who knows nothing.

Thanks so much for lifting my writerly spirits, Jane. I'm forever in your debt.

Posted by Alison at September 14, 2006 10:00 PM | This entry posted in: Finding Your Material
Comments

Oooh, this sounds so excellent and spot-on! Thanks for writing it up, Alison, and I'm so happy to hear she lifted your spirits.

Posted by: marrije at September 15, 2006 05:26 AM

good to hear from you again!

Posted by: stacy at September 15, 2006 01:21 PM

I am not a Novelist although I would like to be.

Just as there are those who can run marathons and enjoy that process, there are those of us who are better at short-distance sprints.

Same with writing I guess. I hunger deep inside to be "able" write "The Novel" but I have neither the fortitude or the stamina.

This article has made me wistful and even a little jealous of those who can create such a wonderful thing as the "lengthy, written, prose narrative with a protagonist."

I AM a writer though and always will be. I am spasmodic, undisciplined, spontaneous, erratic, uncontrolled, untidy, idealistic, fanciful and impatient!

....But I AM a writer and I WILL write and keep on writing my "short, little tales, with or without a protagonist" - even if there is nobody who will read them.

:)

Mitch

Posted by: Mitch at September 15, 2006 09:33 PM

well, i am about to "come out of the closet" as a short story writer. everyone wants me to write a novel, and i think i felt that if i could write in that form then i would have "arrived" in some way. but i am impulsive, impatient and intense - i love what ISNT said and the immediacy of either the short form, poetry or a script for the stage.

so touche to you alison - your passion for that form gave me room to muse over my own LACK of passion!

so to you Mitch - perhaps you are not lacking anything but a clear view of the form that suits you!

Posted by: stacy at September 24, 2006 02:17 PM

Oooh, this sounds so excellent and spot-on! Thanks for writing it up, Alison, and I'm so happy to hear she lifted your spirits. I disagree go to http://www.apartments.waw.pl

Posted by: Warsaw apartments at October 26, 2006 06:25 AM
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Alison Gresik has been crafting her writing life for the last fourteen years. She is the author of Brick and Mortar, a collection of linked stories.

Visit her author blog at www.gresik.ca.

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