Writing, writing, writing

That lovely moment in the story when a phone rings, and you let your character answer it so that both of you can find out who’s on the other end. Really, knowing where the story is going before you get there is overrated.1 Meanwhile: Dear Characters, I’m sorry, but you cannot organize yourselves into one Leader and Four Lancers.2 It just … doesn’t work that way. Me ETA: Dear Group Leader, I know, I know. You have to deal with this lot and you don’t even get the benefit of being the protagonist for your trouble. Would it help if I gave you some angsty back story to make up for it? Me 1Necessary disclaimer: For my writing process. 2If a Five-Man Band has one Leader and Four Lancers, does the Leader become the actual Lancer?

What’s in a critique? Pushing vs. support, confidence vs. criticism

While working on Finding Your Sense of Place I wrote about my first critique group, the Alternate Historians, who pushed me to first understand the importance of emotion and description in my own stories. They pushed me understand a lot of things, and they were the first people to consistently show me what was wrong with my writing and how I could improve it, instead of just telling me how much they liked my stuff, the way my family and friends and teachers mostly had until then. I was so grateful for finally getting that deeper feedback that for a time, I thought every writer was looking for exactly what I was—someone to tell them what wasn’t working and how to improve. So when shortly after joining the Alternate Historians a friend asked me to read her poems, I dug right in. I was proud of the detailed critique I was able to give her. My friend, however, was appalled. “I just wanted to know what you thought,” she informed me icily. Hadn’t I told her what I thought? When it became clear my friend had only expected positive comments, I dismissed her in my mind as someone who wasn’t a serious writer and didn’t want real feedback the way serious writers did. After that, when others asked me to look at their work, I was more careful, and asked them what kind of feedback they were looking for—but truthfully, I was doing that as much to protect myself as them. I didn’t want to waste my time giving what I thought of as “real” critiques to those who wouldn’t appreciate them. I was a new writer. New writers can be harsh, as we take our first stumbling steps toward making our writing a deep and serious part of our lives. We can be judgmental, and we have a bad habit of trying to turn our new-found personal truths into universal truths. I don’t know when I first began to understand things were more complicated than that, but now I know that they are, in so many ways. For one thing, there are many ways to be a writer, and writing for publication is only one of them. There are things I’ve done as hobbies that others do professionally: bookbinding, working with rescued wildlife, running, countless other things through the years. If writing is someone else’s hobby—if they just want to have fun with it, and share for the joy of sharing, without don’t want to push their limits in the same ways I happen to want to push them, that’s fine, and more than fine. And there are many ways to be a professional writer, too. Or, to put it another way, different professional writers need different things. Years after I met my first critique group, in another critique group and another city I was delighted when a writer who’d mostly just filled her critiques of my work with smiley faces finally told me why a story of mine didn’t work for her. I’d had a nagging sense something was off about that story, and I was genuinely grateful for her comments. Yet when I told her so, she was baffled. “I don’t feel like I really gave you anything useful this time,” she said of the first critique in ages where I felt she finally had given me something that felt useful. She told me that to her, a useful critique had at least as much positive feedback as criticism, at least as much focus on what was working as on what wasn’t. I was the one baffled this time, because while positive comments felt good to me and while I did want to know what was working so that I could keep doing it, some part of me was always waiting for that part of the critique to be through, so that I could get to the “real” feedback. Some weeks or months later, this same writer commented more quietly that sometimes new writers just need for other writers to believe in them and tell them their work is worthwhile, because maybe they don’t have anyone else in their lives who believes their work matters. It took a while for that to sink in, just like it took a while for it to sink in that my friend probably wasn’t really talking about other writers, but about herself. One of the things that sank in—one of the things I now understand—is that not every writer already has someone who believes in them. Those family and friends and teachers who told me my work was awesome without helping me to improve it gave me more than I knew. They gave me something I needed more deeply than I’d understood: the deep belief that my work was worthwhile and worth pursuing. That belief would later help me get up the courage to show my work to others, to ask for deeper feedback, to be able to listen to that feedback and make the most of it, and to send my work out into the world. I don’t know if I would have eventually found the belief and courage I needed on my own, through brute force, with time. I do know that I didn’t find it on my own, but with help and support. And I know that without that basic foundation—a foundation so basic I hadn’t even fully realized it was there—I could never have moved forward. Thank you, supportive family and friends and teachers who I took for granted. Thank you so very much. I still ask, now, when I’m giving a critique, what writers are looking for. But I no longer think there’s a right or wrong answer to that question. If I have a chance to tell someone else that their work is worthwhile, to play some part in building their foundation and confidence by pointing to the sparks that are worth pursuing—why wouldn’t I want to do that? Now, I see it as an honor. Indeed, in the years since my harsh early writer days, I’ve handed manuscripts to others, from time to time, too, and told them truthfully, “I just want to know this doesn’t suck.” It’s easy to be full of confidence in the early years of a writing career, but through the years and decades after that, well, we all need a confidence boost, some years more than others. Long-term writing careers are complicated, after all. There’s more than one way to be a “serious” writer, and serious writers—all writers—need many things to move forward. We need people who will push our work to the next level, yes, absolutely. But we also need people who believe in us, as we work to internalize that belief for ourselves, and as we work to hang on to it after that. If the push to improve is missing, our work may never sell. But if the belief that the work is worthwhile is missing, that work might never get written in the first place. We need both things, belief and challenges. It’s not an either/or and never was. Writing isn’t that simple, after all. Few things are.

Magical Writing: Learning in Leaps

Today I’m blogging at Christine Kohler’s Read Like A Writer about the ways writers learn.
Put that way, it seems simple. Read enough, go to enough conferences, show our work to enough outside readers, get enough advice, and most of all, simply write enough, and slowly and surely, our stories will get better, improving incrementally as we put in our time. But it doesn’t work that way, does it? At least, it doesn’t work that way for me.
Read the rest of Learning in Leaps here.

Finding Your Sense of Place—emotion, description, and setting

I’m happy to announce Finding Your Sense of Place, a new ebook based on my talks on emotion, description, and setting. Finding Your Sense of Place shares some of the early insights that helped me uncover what was missing from my work, allowing me to begin producing professional work more consistently, as well as providing other tools for bringing settings and their characters to life. To order your copy, go here—or see below for more details.
senseofplacecover300x450Find Your Sense of Place Use setting and description to bring your characters to life and increase the emotional impact of your stories. Setting is about much more than providing a few scene-setting details and moving on. Discover why the descriptions that seem to get in the way of your stories are actually the most powerful tools you have to bring characters to life and make readers care about their stories. Two decades ago, acclaimed novelist Janni Lee Simner took her writing to the next level and began selling her work when she realized that emotion and description are, ultimately, the same thing. In Finding Your Sense of Place she shares insights and techniques to help you: • Understand why different characters see the same places differently—even if they walk side by side • Craft descriptions that help readers connect with your characters on a deeper level • Make room for descriptive passages that won’t bog your story down • Select the most powerful scene-enhancing metaphors • Research your story’s setting—whether your story is set close to home or far away, in the present day or a thousand years ago • Choose the descriptive details that best convey that setting to readers Finding Your Sense of Voice is available wherever ebooks are sold. Order your copy from:Kobo and their independent bookstore partnersBarnes and NobleAmazonSmashwords

Exploration

Dear Characters Who Stubbornly Refuse to Become Distinct from One Another, Each of you has, like, only a couple distinguishing characteristics. You surely know this. But if we combine you, you’ll have a whole bunch more. Right? Right? Hello? — Me =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= Dear All Characters on Deck, See this nice little quest I have ready for you? Waiting over in the corner there? You … don’t seem to be in any rush to go on it. In fact, you see determined to DIY your own quest from the materials at hand instead. But perhaps I’m misunderstanding. Let’s keep writing, shall we? — Me

“It shall be a year of complete rest for the land”

In Jewish tradition, not only is every seventh day a day of rest, but every seventh year is a year of rest–for the land, anyway, which is supposed to be allowed to lie fallow for that time. This year, it turns out, is a seventh year, a Shmita. I only recently realized this, and I’ve been thinking about what it means, not only literally but also metaphorically. I do take Saturdays off from writing (though not from speaking or from many other things that are also considered work), and this has been a good decision for me on many levels. Yet I find I’m not willing–not brave enough, perhaps?–to take a year off from writing, even outside of the business concerns that brings up. Writing’s defined me and been a part of how I process this world and this life for so long, after all–though I can see how good things could likely arise out of stepping back for a time, too. So instead I’ve been thinking about this: if I can’t let everything go, what are the things in my life that could be allowed to lie fallow this year, that could benefit from a rest, from some time away, from my giving myself permission to let them lie, without guilt and with deliberate intentions, for a time? I don’t have any quick or easy answers to that. But it’s an interesting question to contemplate, and one worth, I think, keeping in my sights for a bit. I do know this: it’s not only Jewish tradition that’s found that planting the same seeds in the same soil, year after year, isn’t good for the land or the harvest. Do the same thing over and over again and eventually, nothing will grow. If we can’t bring ourselves to give our work a complete rest, I still think it’s worth remembering to–and finding creative ways to–rotate our crops. That’s something worth thinking about in the year ahead, too.

“‘Cause you can’t jump the track / we’re like cars on a cable”

Dear Recently Promoted Secondary Character, No, I’m sorry, but you can’t have All the Things. Mad fighting skills: denied. Mad healing skills: denied. We’re going for interesting here, not unrealistic. Seriously, most people would be content with the mad flying skills. I promise you’ll get to use them, by the end. Me P.S. What? No. Promotion to protagonist denied with prejudice!

That moment you suspect the story’s just fine, after all

So a few weeks ago, I was truly hating this book I’m working on now, and wondering if I ought to just give up and work on something else. I did give up and work on something else–several something elses–and along the way got the opening of at least one future project just far enough along that I can now let it simmer in the subconscious for a while. But I’m back to my original new project this week, and today, I found myself writing this bit of dialogue:
“The universe is larger and more wondrous than we know, yadda yadda yadda.” “You used to take this story more seriously,” I told her. “Yeah, well, my personality is shifting,” she said. “We’re all still figuring out who we are. This is the first draft, after all. Anyway, where was I?”
And that is so utterly like what I would expect from the exploratory rough first draft of any of my books that, well, I’m beginning to think that this story–which I’m no longer hating at all–just might be exactly where it’s supposed to be at this stage of the process.
Dear Formerly Tertiary Character I Haven’t Seen in Fifty Pages or More, I always thought you were more interesting than your minor role in the story had room for. I just didn’t know how interesting. Until now. You’ll be getting a retroactive upgrade to Secondary Character, effective immediately. Just don’t tell the other Tertiaries. They’re totally going to be giving up speaking lines to make room for you. Welcome to the story, Me

Then again, maybe the book is just shy

Dear Book, So there I was, just about ready to give up on you, when you offer me … that. A reason to write you, and a glimmer of what you’re really all about. Was it the threat of being trunked that made you give in? Or did you actually choose to wait until the most frustrating possible moment to give up the first of your secrets? Just wondering, Me P.S. Unless it’s all a lie. We’ll have words if it’s all a lie. And I don’t mean the words on your pages.

In which Idina Menzel and Patti Griffin help me flee from zombies

I talk to Naomi Alderman about writing for Zombies, Run. The Zombies, Run! app chooses songs from whatever playlist you feed it, and in that post, I talk about how my favorite moments are the ones when something comes up that’s wildly inappropriate for the narrative. Today’s episode was filled with those awesome moments. First, just as a friend has gone gray (turned into a zombie) and I’m fleeing from them, my playlist urged me to “Let It Go.” Then, just another character was revealed to have secret zombie blood inside them, I was told “Something has changed within me. Something is not the same.” And then a traitor was unmasked to strains of, “Don’t bring me bad news, no bad news, I don’t need none of your bad news today.” And this is why I run from zombies. Along the way, I’m pondering the fact that said traitor’s unmasking was utterly expected, and yet nonetheless satisfying. The discovery isn’t the only thing that makes a reveal satisfying–this is a craft thing worth thinking about some more.