Story Training, or
How To Tell the Truth and Lie About It

Techniques for cross training among different disciplines of storytelling. The blog of TalkToStrangers.org.

This blog has moved to TalkToStrangersCampaign.blogspot.com.
Please join us there!


Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Spotlight On: The Lace Reader

The Lace ReaderThis is a winner, folks. The Lace Reader is the best-crafted modern adult novel I've read in the last five years. It's not out yet, so I'm not going to include any spoilers in this post, but the book is a great study in character development in relationship to plot and environment. The book is sometimes startling, but is never misleading. It's got all the psychological intrigue common to the modern novel or play, with enough of a sense of magic (grounded in the environment) and physical threat to satisfy a fan of Camelot and Robin Hood. The sense of place is remarkable. The characters are as vivid as the imagery. This is the type of book that you should just read: don't bother to read the back or find out what it's about; just get ahold of it and read it.

Labels: , , , ,

Sunday, January 21, 2007

A Novel Arch

As a fiction writer, I’ve always felt I should have a favorite novel or author, preferably contemporary. But until I read James Clavell’s Shogun a couple of years ago, I’d never read a novel that really did anything.
That’s a pretty vague way of saying that most novels are more a series of anecdotes or short stories, or an entertaining but wandering tale. Sometimes there are moments that take your breath away, and sometimes it’s just a fun read. And that’s fine.
But once in a while, there’s a novel that lives up to the medium’s full potential: The author uses the whole length of the narrative to subtly but irrevocably bring you on a journey in which not only the characters but also the readers change.
Shogun does this most obviously through point of view. You start out looking at the story through the eyes of the foreigner and end up in the mind of a samari. Other books, like Michael Malone’s Foolscap, lead the reader on the journey while the protagonist is on a similar journey. There are any number of methods that could be used; the important thing is that a full story arch (catalyst, climb, climax/resolution) is realized over the course of the novel.

Labels: