Chuck Wendig
interviewed Lisa Cron this week for his blog Terribleminds and she gave us her
take on developing story. Another great
find for interviews by Mr. Wendig, he rarely disappoints. Lisa has a very fresh take on the importance
of STORY and how it relates to the human brain.
She has a new book out called Wired for Story, and I can’t wait
to read it. She is a big time producer
for Showtime and Court TV, a writer and also teaches a writing course at UCLA. She has spent the last ten years researching
the connection between neuroscience and how the brain relates to stories. It’s quite fascinating and illuminating, allowing
us to learn techniques that will make your story click with the reader. They can’t help themselves, the brain is hard
wired for receiving stories and if we can strike the right chord it will
resonate within the readers mind.
On
Lisa's blog she touched on why books that get panned by critiques can still sell
at amazing rates. It answers the
question as to why books like 50 Shades of Gray can sell millions of
books. I remember picking up The
Hunger Games, because my wife and daughter love it, and reading the first
couple of pages and saying to myself, the prose just aren’t all that, but next
thing I knew I was 100 pages in and couldn’t put it down. Stephanie Myers Twilight books have
been criticized for not having elaborate prose also, but the one thing all of
these books have in common is they tell a great story and in a way that touches
those chords in the mind.
The
concept has already had an impact on my writing. I think it helped me frame the true story for
my WIP. CJ Cherryh had a recent rant on
her facebook page (5 July) about the difference between plot and story and now
that I have this new frame of reference I can see that she was saying basically
the same thing. The plot is not what
drives the story. The plot is just a
tool to get the characters to create the story you are trying to tell. The plot elements are moveable and malleable.
When I deal with libraries and such, people who appreciate
books, I often get asked questions about the creation of 'plot' --- in the
sense of the sort of book reports we used to have to give in school. These
usually amounted to a recitation of what happened in the book. And these always
confused heck out of me---I started writing at 10. I had been wrestling with
'plot' and 'theme' and this sort of thing on an intimate level for (at my young
age) years, and the definitions of those terms that I had to memorize for tests
just didn't ring true with the way I did things. There was a wrongness in the
basic assumptions that was bugging the life out of me.// Took me twenty years
to figure what WAS bothering me---and to this day I really can't define those
terms, because they may shift with every type of book---but I came to a very
basic conclusion: there IS no such thing as 'plot' in the sense most of these
analyses deal with it. Plot is NOT the sequence of things that happen in the
book. Those are the 'things that happen in the book,' and they actually are the
most replaceable, ephemeral, rearrangeable things about the book. If you could
lean over my shoulder while I work, you'd see me move things about, put events
in different order, yank something I don't want, put in something similar but
'else', and in sort, work with the causality and the chain of events, but these
are not the plot. They are gears that need to mesh correctly, these are pieces
that need to operate smoothly together---to PLAY OFF the 'real Plot' of the
book, which is much more of a three-dimensional diagram of the lines of tension
between the characters. You arrange events to tweak these lines of tension and
cause a chain reaction, and figuring out how to do that may require you to
change the events, change the people involved, change how the news travels,
change the order of things---you see what I mean? The Real Plot is that 3-d
constellation of characters and alliances and relationships, and these Actions
are nothing but a set of triggers that could be ANY trigger. Finding the most
logical order of triggers is head-work. Theme? I'm not sure what the hell that
is. I think it's the answer to that basic question a writer may want to write
down on paper and pin to the wall above his desk: What's this book about,
anyway? And very often there's no one word answer, or there is---say---like
Loyalty; but that doesn't say much. It takes the whole book to say what there
is to say about that item, the way you see it, the way it affects the Real
Plot, the feeling it generates. That's why my teachers sometimes ticked me
'wrong' about certain answers, when I'd really thought long and hard about the
answer and didn't agree with the expected answer. That's because when you start
pushing those buttons on my personal console, you just may come up with a
different book. Different answers. You may now realize that I've just answered
that persistent groaner of a question "Where do you get your ideas?"
---with the observation that ideas are no problem, so long as a writer has a
pulse rate---but that Execution, ie, getting those ideas to assume a good
constellation of tensions and then tweaking those lines of force to create a
natural cascade of reactions leading to a satisfactory ending---that, THAT is
the hard part.
--CJ
Cherryh
Keeping STORY in the forefront of my mind as
I revise the WIP is really helping me focus on the things that can stay and the
things that need to go. It also helped
me refocus my Query letter. I know what the
essence of the book is about and was able to better articulate it. Here is the
core of my new Query Letter:
What does an immortal
bajillionaire have to complain about?
That’s what Remie La Jeunesse keeps reminding himself. It’s how he’s managed to get by the least few
decades, but he’s reached the end of the line.
He’s young by Nemesi standards, at 786, but he can’t find happiness
anymore. Weary
of the death and despair he’s suffered for the last several centuries, Remie is ready to end his life, but he has one last obligation to
fulfill. He’s just received the call
that the plan he’s spent 240 years meticulously planning is finally ready to
trigger. Will carrying out the plan be
his demise or will it reignite his passions?
Anneliese Trahan is a damn good pilot and a rising star for
Nobloquy, the military arm of Nollevelle Corporation. Her career path seemed to be on the fast
track after leaving the comfort and security of her family trade ship, but the
intervention of a past lover derails her plans and puts her on a collision
course with a man determined to destroy Nollevelle and any chance at a
captaincy. Will she be the one to end
his life or save his soul?
At any rate,
I ordered Wired for Story and should have it by the end of the week. I’m maybe a 5th of the way through
my 3rd rewrite and hopefully it will be ready for submission soon.
Clear Ether!
You're the best!
ReplyDeleteLove,
your biggest fan!
**Big Smacker!** I love you!
DeleteThis is intriguing. As an artist, teacher and writer I believe our brain is wired to create and connect to images and emotion. I plan to buy this one. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteIt intrigues me too, Jolene. I can't wait to see what secrets its has to share. Thanks for coming by and leaving a comment!
DeleteYes, as a writer, it's sometimes hard for me to accept that poorly written books will be popular. :) But every time I see people talking about how they loved X even though it had crappy writing, they mention how they just loved "the story" or sometimes, the characters. And I think it comes down to whether what happens in the story affects them as a reader.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting. Thanks for sharing, Todd!
Hi Jami, I know you have had some posts on this topic recently, I thought this book would have particular interest for you. I'm glad you found my new site!
ReplyDeleteFirst off - you've screwed with my Blogger and I can't seem to get your blog to show up on my list of blogs - even when I put in your new URL, I get the old one! I'm hoping it's just Blogger having a bad day.
ReplyDeleteI remember a line from Stephen King when he talked about plot. He said real life doesn't have a plot. Things just happen. I don't plot my story. I write events with a (vague) destination in mind. How the characters get there is the fun part. They just "live" their lives and react to the events I throw at them. It's what we do in real life, right?
Hi Stacy! Sorry about your Blogger, all I did was rename the blog. I am having issues with a few of the widgets not recognizing the new name. Hopefully it will refresh and solve those issues.
DeleteI thought my story was the plot but the further I got the more I realized that the story and the plot were actually different, and the plot only served to get my protagonist through his story. it made a huge difference in how I attack the revision. I have a similar way of organically developing the story between the plot points and I don't see that changing, but I am trying to outline the second book in this trilogy.