Your writing: the real vs imaginary world
Posted: 30 Jul 2015, 11:45
In a fairly lengthy and very interesting thread, the "greatest writing fear" is discussed. I've seen a trend in much of the postings and I'd like to comment on this general theme that seems to be prevalent among new writers.
Many here seem to be so reluctant to share their writing because they fear it won't be accepted or they'll be severely criticized because the writing isn't "good" enough, feelings like that. But no specifics either, just a general fear of "exposure" to summarize.
Part of this is, I think, due to the conflict that we all have with the real versus the imaginary world. Let me explain...
The imaginary world is the one that we create in our writing. Many here seem to be writing fantasy which of course increases this imaginary environment. For me, although I've written some supernatural horror stories, my principal writing is a series of modern American private detective novels. My particular story type is very realistic, my private eye is as close to a real private detective that I can manage, not any James Bond-ish at all. So my writing, even though it's fiction, is very realistic, as opposed to fantasy.
Nevertheless, my stories are totally made up and there's very little reality in my fiction, even though I put real places in my Houston-based novels.
Anyway... the idea is this... I write fiction so it's imaginary. But, and this is important, I write my novels for the reason that yes, I love to write, but I also write to sell my stuff. Luckily I recently contracted with a non-vanity publisher who will soon publish all 3 of my private detective novels in both paperback and e-book.
My point is this: We write because we love to write, true. But we also write so that we can share what we create with others in the "real world". Now if you're writing a diary or chapbook, that's different. That sort of writing is for personal reflections and should be kept private, maybe to share only with a close friend. But the vast majority of your writing is meant for people to read. And this means publishing. Now you might self-publish or you might, as I do, market your stuff to a paying publisher. Either way, it's there for others to read.
And this "fear" or reticence about having your writing "out there" is substantive for many here.
What is important is this: Your imaginary fictional world is also "real" -- remember that your fevered brain is real, your thoughts are real -- electronic pulses -- and your writing goes onto a physical place, whether a pen & paper or a computer. It's all "real" regardless. You're in that real world from the very start. Sorry.
My objective is this -- to persuade newbie writers to not be fearful and to try to shed this sort of fear and go forward with your talents. You are ALREADY in the "real" world and there you will stay. The fictional world that you create is also real, as real as the table you sit at. It's an illusion that the fictional environment is not a real thing. Yes it comes from your brain but it's as real as your eyes or ears.
Let me encourage others here, those whose reluctance has hampered them, to do this: get out there!
By this, I mean the following... Learn and hone your talents, improve your craft. Those are of course essential. Very few people are prodigies at writing. All famous writers learned how to write and worked hard to improve their skills. Most famous writers had boxes full of total junk that they wrote before they learned their trade.
And the word "trade" is accurate here. Writing is a trade just like woodworking or painting houses. And nobody picks up a paintbrush and can paint a house "naturally" -- someone shows them.
Likewise, you must be "shown how" by your peers. I mean, those other writers whom you admire or whose works are within the same genre as yours. I write mostly mystery fiction. And so I read a LOT of mysteries. I review mysteries for a website and so I've always got my nose in a new thriller. I love these stories which is exactly why I chose to write them. But I have learned my trade by reading many, many books by famous and less-famous mystery authors, and I've "taken notes in class" by realizing how good writers control their pacing and rhythm, how they evoke an emotion by use of certain words and sentence structure, how they make characters seem believable by having that character speak realistic and interesting dialogue, and so on. All the tricks of the trade. Then I've applied them to my own writing and have tried not to copycat, but to emulate the better concepts.
I've said this before -- when I first started writing conversations, I treated my characters like marionettes, and "made" them say things. And the results were a wooden as a puppet. Later, I did this: I "created" a character and put that character into a situation, then just stood back and took dictation. I let the characters speak for themselves, as real people, and the results were amazing by comparison. Of course this is just a mind trick that I play, since everything comes from my one brain. But this trick succeeded.
So yeah, I have improved my writing. And now I've actually sold my novels in a real-world environment, a paying publisher.
My point is this: Your writing is imaginary, yes. But it's meant for the real world. Whether you self publish or submit to conventional publishers as I do, you must quit the closed-minded self-imposed boundary of the imaginary and place your writing into the real world. I also encourage newbie writers to work very hard at conventional submissions to agents or publishers. It's hard to do and you certainly will get lots of rejections -- I've got an entire disc file of TBNTs (thanks but no thanks) from agencies and publishers. ALL writers get rejected. But then you get a small buy from a small magazine, paying you maybe 20 bucks for that short story. Relish in this! Print out or copy that payment voucher and stick in above your desk! Then keep plugging away.
Realize this: Although your writing is imaginary, it nevertheless belongs in the real world. Break through that emotional boundary and learn to accept rejection --- all writers have to learn this -- and continue to hone your skills and keep plugging away. Hey, if I can do it, so can you. But you've got to first make that transition from the imaginary to the real world, whether by self publishing or conventional means. Okay?
Many here seem to be so reluctant to share their writing because they fear it won't be accepted or they'll be severely criticized because the writing isn't "good" enough, feelings like that. But no specifics either, just a general fear of "exposure" to summarize.
Part of this is, I think, due to the conflict that we all have with the real versus the imaginary world. Let me explain...
The imaginary world is the one that we create in our writing. Many here seem to be writing fantasy which of course increases this imaginary environment. For me, although I've written some supernatural horror stories, my principal writing is a series of modern American private detective novels. My particular story type is very realistic, my private eye is as close to a real private detective that I can manage, not any James Bond-ish at all. So my writing, even though it's fiction, is very realistic, as opposed to fantasy.
Nevertheless, my stories are totally made up and there's very little reality in my fiction, even though I put real places in my Houston-based novels.
Anyway... the idea is this... I write fiction so it's imaginary. But, and this is important, I write my novels for the reason that yes, I love to write, but I also write to sell my stuff. Luckily I recently contracted with a non-vanity publisher who will soon publish all 3 of my private detective novels in both paperback and e-book.
My point is this: We write because we love to write, true. But we also write so that we can share what we create with others in the "real world". Now if you're writing a diary or chapbook, that's different. That sort of writing is for personal reflections and should be kept private, maybe to share only with a close friend. But the vast majority of your writing is meant for people to read. And this means publishing. Now you might self-publish or you might, as I do, market your stuff to a paying publisher. Either way, it's there for others to read.
And this "fear" or reticence about having your writing "out there" is substantive for many here.
What is important is this: Your imaginary fictional world is also "real" -- remember that your fevered brain is real, your thoughts are real -- electronic pulses -- and your writing goes onto a physical place, whether a pen & paper or a computer. It's all "real" regardless. You're in that real world from the very start. Sorry.
My objective is this -- to persuade newbie writers to not be fearful and to try to shed this sort of fear and go forward with your talents. You are ALREADY in the "real" world and there you will stay. The fictional world that you create is also real, as real as the table you sit at. It's an illusion that the fictional environment is not a real thing. Yes it comes from your brain but it's as real as your eyes or ears.
Let me encourage others here, those whose reluctance has hampered them, to do this: get out there!
By this, I mean the following... Learn and hone your talents, improve your craft. Those are of course essential. Very few people are prodigies at writing. All famous writers learned how to write and worked hard to improve their skills. Most famous writers had boxes full of total junk that they wrote before they learned their trade.
And the word "trade" is accurate here. Writing is a trade just like woodworking or painting houses. And nobody picks up a paintbrush and can paint a house "naturally" -- someone shows them.
Likewise, you must be "shown how" by your peers. I mean, those other writers whom you admire or whose works are within the same genre as yours. I write mostly mystery fiction. And so I read a LOT of mysteries. I review mysteries for a website and so I've always got my nose in a new thriller. I love these stories which is exactly why I chose to write them. But I have learned my trade by reading many, many books by famous and less-famous mystery authors, and I've "taken notes in class" by realizing how good writers control their pacing and rhythm, how they evoke an emotion by use of certain words and sentence structure, how they make characters seem believable by having that character speak realistic and interesting dialogue, and so on. All the tricks of the trade. Then I've applied them to my own writing and have tried not to copycat, but to emulate the better concepts.
I've said this before -- when I first started writing conversations, I treated my characters like marionettes, and "made" them say things. And the results were a wooden as a puppet. Later, I did this: I "created" a character and put that character into a situation, then just stood back and took dictation. I let the characters speak for themselves, as real people, and the results were amazing by comparison. Of course this is just a mind trick that I play, since everything comes from my one brain. But this trick succeeded.
So yeah, I have improved my writing. And now I've actually sold my novels in a real-world environment, a paying publisher.
My point is this: Your writing is imaginary, yes. But it's meant for the real world. Whether you self publish or submit to conventional publishers as I do, you must quit the closed-minded self-imposed boundary of the imaginary and place your writing into the real world. I also encourage newbie writers to work very hard at conventional submissions to agents or publishers. It's hard to do and you certainly will get lots of rejections -- I've got an entire disc file of TBNTs (thanks but no thanks) from agencies and publishers. ALL writers get rejected. But then you get a small buy from a small magazine, paying you maybe 20 bucks for that short story. Relish in this! Print out or copy that payment voucher and stick in above your desk! Then keep plugging away.
Realize this: Although your writing is imaginary, it nevertheless belongs in the real world. Break through that emotional boundary and learn to accept rejection --- all writers have to learn this -- and continue to hone your skills and keep plugging away. Hey, if I can do it, so can you. But you've got to first make that transition from the imaginary to the real world, whether by self publishing or conventional means. Okay?