Books about writing… books
In my most recent SCWBI crit
group chat (held on Zoom, of course!), we discussed a wide range of writer
topics, as we always do. As writers always
do: How can we all write in the time of Covid? What to write next? What age group
is my book really for? And does that matter?
What’s the right balance of writing new and editing/re-writing. That
sort of thing.
A perennial topic is the usefulness of the
‘guide’ books, the how-to’s, the ones that tell us there are underlying patterns
and rhythms and if we all mastered them… well, we’d just be less lost, and whole
lot more confident about how and what to write.
I’ve read a few. Many are forgettable. But
some are, in my view, pretty good, so I’m going to review them here, and give you
an idea of what they say. It might help you judge whether they are worth your
hard earned pennys, or not. And more importantly, worth your time.
1 Into the Woods – John Yorke
Probably the most popular
and well known of the books I’ve chosen.
It’s concise, well written
and – for a relatively short book – covers all the bases: What a story actually
is. (Ask yourself if you know that. It’s an interesting question). Also structure, inciting incidents, showing
rather than telling; (illustrated with examples rather than directions – how
meta!), character, structure and dialogue. You get the idea.
I guess it’s the ‘if you
only read one book, read this one,’ book, of the ones I’, recommending.
2 The Writer’s Journey -
Christopher Vogler
Joseph Campbell for the
modern world. There is – really – only
one story, and it plays out in many ways and variations, but there are common
notes and patterns in all the best ones, and Vogler goes some way to convincing
us of what they are.
He goes to great pains to remind us, it is a
form, not a formula. Do it by numbers
and your book will be dull and lifeless. Your reader will know where you are
going, even before you did when you were writing it. But, equally, ignore at
your peril. The monomyth is part of what makes a story a story.
3 The Seven Basic Plots – Christopher Booker
My personal favourite, not least because,
though it’s a hefty tome, you can dip in and out and pick out the bits relevant
to what you want to know at any particular time. Especially useful for second draft writing a
chapter, when you may be scratching your head, wondering what kind of story, or
part of a story, you have actually just written. (ahem).
He subscribes to the mono myth too, but argues
there are seven core varieties: Overcoming the monster, rags to riches, the
quest, voyage and return, comedy, tragedy and rebirth. And further, that when
you make certain choices about your character, what happens to them and, crucially,
what they make happen, your story
becomes one of these variations. It’s
also great because it focuses a lot on actual books, not mostly films and TV
like so many other books about writing do.
The subtitle is ‘why we tell
stories,’ and he goes further than anyone I’ve ever read, in terms of exploring
what stories are, and – yes, why we tell them, why we write them. And I can’t even
begin to try and summarise that, but it’s
worth reading, especially if you are someone who dedicates a huge part of your
life to creating and writing stories, even if you’re not quite sure why.
That’s you BTW.
So, three great books. And I’m eager for recommendations too, so
please provide in the comments section.
Finally, do I subscribe to these theories
myself? Yes, absolutely. But I do think it’s important to remind myself that
knowing the structure and form of a symphony or a sonnet, is useful, but it
won’t, in the end, help me, or anyone, be enough in itself, to make great music or great poetry.
Chris Vick is the author of
several books for young people. The latest,
Girl. Boy. Sea. is shortlisted for the CILIP Carnegie medal 2020.
3 comments:
Thank you very much for these recommendations. I think maybe it would be good for me to set some time aside to read these. I love 'Bird by Bird' by Anne Lamott myself, but that is less about structural approaches and more about blocks and attitudes.
Thanks, Anne, wil check that one out.
C
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