On October 14, 2011, maybeawriter wrote, I have a problem with my stories. I like the ideas but the words never seem right. Please help!
I asked for clarification, and maybeawriter added, Well, it seems like they don’t flow right or seems like there is another word that might fit in better, but I can’t really think of any, like there could be a better word for just walking, or the feel of the water.
Word choice influences everything, but it especially affects voice, tone, and mood. I recently read M. T. Anderson’s young adult novel The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing, which astonished me in the best possible way. Here’s a sentence early in the book: And so the answer to my perplexities, which must appear in all its clarity to those who look from above, was finally clear to me: that I too was the subject of a zoological experiment. Even earlier Mr. Anderson describes the house where Octavian lives as “gaunt,” such an imaginative and evocative adjective. The word choices perfectly represent my idea of 18th century expression. And, despite the elaborate sentences, Mr. Anderson tells a riveting story. When things get tough, Octavian becomes Observant. The term exactly expresses the character’s experience, and it breaks the reader’s heart, my heart anyway.
As I read I kept wishing I’d written the book. I couldn’t. I can write only what I can write although I can try to expand my style and my sentences. Reading a lot helps with that. While I was reading Octavian Nothing, I had to hold back from letting his sorts of sentences infiltrate my writing where they didn’t belong. The voices of other writers get inside us. When it’s no longer so fresh, in this case probably a few months from now, Mr. Anderson’s work will influence me subtly, appropriately.
Writing and reading poetry help me, too. I’m much more aware of consonant and vowel sounds than I used to be. In the sentence before this one, for example, I find the m’s in I’m much more and the ow’s in vowel sounds pleasing. I notice them as I write, and sometimes I shorten the distance between words to bring like sounds closer together. Other times I deliberately go against the harmony. You can do this without writing or reading poetry (although I’m a big fan of doing both). Here’s a prompt: Pick a paragraph (notice the alliteration; I could have written choose a paragraph) in a story you’re working on. Underline any alliteration and any repeat vowel sounds. I suspect you’ll find at least a few, because English is full of similar sounds. Look for substitutions you can make to increase the effect. Try them out. Does the paragraph read better?
Now go the other way. Substitute to move away from the similarities. Read the paragraph out loud and decide which you prefer and which goes more with the feeling of your story. There’s no right answer. The purpose is just to become more alert to sound and its subtle effects.
Maybeawriter, words are a pale reflection of experience. We can never precisely convey the feeling of water; not even Shakespeare could have. If we were writing for the man on the moon who has never felt rain, we couldn’t represent clearly enough the sensation of wetness. If he flew his spaceship into an ocean and swam out, then he might say, I get it now. Before I was just guessing. This suggests another prompt: Describe water for the man in the moon. You won’t succeed, but create a longing in him with your description, so that the distance between him and the nearest cloud becomes unbearable.
You can then go ahead and write a story about his visit to earth.
Some friends and I were just discussing the impossibility of describing the color red to someone blind from birth. We can talk about warm colors and cool colors and heat and power, blood, and even anger. We can describe the color wheel. A blind person will understand heat and blood and emotions and the idea of a color wheel, but he won’t experience red, I don’t think. In Fairest, I invented the color htun, and I describe it, but I’ve never seen it – wish I could. But I can come closer to picturing it than a blind person could because I already see colors.
What tools do we have to show our readers what they and the writer haven’t experienced? Writers of fantasy and sci fi and historical fiction voyage to places we’ve never been and never will go, and the glory in the writing is in creating something utterly new. We do it by moving from what we have experienced to what we haven’t. Suppose we’re describing charged mimo particles, which have the power to suck seeds out of the ground. In nature, the nature of this world, they appear only in huge colonies; you won’t encounter a single mimo on its own except in the laboratory. A colony will slide slowly down a slope, like fudge sauce over ice cream, all the while sparkling like a billion brown fireflies. If they’re important to your story, you can go further and tell the reader that Sal had a brush with them once. She was snoozing in a meadow on the west side of Chotig Mountain when a colony oozed out of an abandoned mine shaft and slithered down. She woke up when her pinky finger started tingling. Luckily she jumped to the right, out of its path. Her pinky was gone completely, leaving only a tiny blue scar, and that meadow will never bloom again. If you want more you can introduce a science teacher at Sal’s high school delivering a lecture about mimos.
None of us has encountered mimos, but we have seen dirt fields, scars, fireflies, and hot fudge descending on ice cream, and we know how tingling feels. Even if you’re home schooled, you’ve probably been lectured to, if only on television. We work toward the unknown from the familiar.
But when it comes to the familiar, like water, a perfectly acceptable choice is to zip by it quickly. Everybody knows the sensation of water, so it’s fine to say, the water was icy. But suppose this is a moment of heightened experience. Sal has been lost in the desert. She’s just reached an oasis and is drinking her first water in thirty-six hours. Or she’s covered in worm slime and is finally taking a shower. You want to describe either of these. Well, you might go for metaphor and call the water a surprise party, rebirth, birdsong. I’m choosing images that are somehow water-like. Water, even though it’s familiar, is often pleasantly shocking, like a surprise party. Rebirth is a common idea when it comes to water, which is essential for life. And birdsong is a fluid sound. I wouldn’t use a metaphor like The water was a shoe because it’s hard to imagine anything less like water than a shoe.
Going in a more practical direction, the best boon for word choice is a thesaurus. I often use www.thesaurus.com to take me beyond the words I usually use. Sometimes the synonyms I see persuade me to rephrase my whole sentence more pleasingly.
Now, on the blog I may make everything sound easy, and then, when we start writing, we struggle. So I’ll end with a sort-of quote, sort of because I don’t know where it comes from, but not from me, because I’m rarely so delightfully loose. The not-quite-a-quote goes something like, When my writing isn’t up to my standards, I lower my standards. Excellent advice if we’re going to slog all the way to the end.
Prompts are scattered through the post, but here’s one more: Invent a substance and incorporate it into a scene, using a new main character or a character in a story you’re working on.
Have fun, and save what you write!
Clara harpgirl says:
The water was a shoe. Haha I like that =) Great post!
capng says:
I'd suggest THE BLACK BOOK OF COLORS for things like this. It describes colors,all on pages that are completely black. It's written in print and braille, and has these awesome raised/embossed pictures. I read it when we were studying braille in spectrum. I love the idea of the mimos! Mind if I use it???
welliewalks says:
That book sounds amazing!! I put it on hold at my library! Thank you for the suggestion!
gailcarsonlevine says:
capng–THE BLACK BOOK OF COLORS sounds marvelous. Thanks for letting us know about it. Certainly you can use the mimos.
Brianna says:
Wait, so her finger was COMPLETELY gone?! That's creepy, and seems really dangerous if the mimos can eat away at anything!! I guess that would heighten the suspense though. Is there a cure/way to stop it?
Great post Gail!
Is anyone here doing ScriptFrenzy?
April G says:
I liked that this post wasn't about finding a single specific word. You're absolutely right. Word choice is about all the pieces fitting together as well as the experiences we want to create for our readers. Thank you!
MollyMom103 says:
Good wise stuff here. M. T. Anderson’s young adult novel The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing, ah, I totally love this book. I was bowled over by the writing there. I was despondent after reading that book, I mean, why even try. But I did find in the end that the book was a good influence on me and managed to "subtly influnce" me when my despair had run its course.
On word choice, I've found dipping into poetry has helped me add extra ummph to my word choice. This is a book I read: The Ode Less Travelled: Unlocking the Poet Within by Stephen Fry. It is tongue-in-cheek and that suited me just fine.
Hi, Gail!
B.Martin says:
Hahaha…….. like your post.
Thanks for the post Gail.
Kate says:
You might want to try taking the vocabulary course from here: pottersschool.org. It's really good and is all about how words work and you learn new words (because some of the work is analyzing long words, weird words).
gailcarsonlevine says:
Hi, Molly! Nice to hear from you! I'd love to talk sometime about OCTAVIAN NOTHING. I have THE ODE LESS TRAVELED, too, but I can't remember if I read it!
writeforfun says:
(Sorry, I noticed a few typos in that comment)
I know someone who can't smell – I mean he has no sense of smell whatsoever, never has. We always talk about describing color to blind people (by the way,the Black Book of Colors sounds really cool!), but sometimes I forget that there are other senses, as well, that are just as elusive to capture. Can you imagine trying to describe food to someone who couldn't taste? I've written a poem before trying to describe music to a deaf person. What a challenge!
By the way, I love writing poetry! It makes me write with poetry devices sometimes in my normal fiction, as well.
Agnes says:
Great post! Gail do you think that you could update the information on the summer writing workshop on you website?
Right now it's about 2011. Thank you so much, I hope to see you at your workshop!
Agnes
gailcarsonlevine says:
Agnes– Thanks for letting me know that page is way out of date! We'll fix it, but in the meanwhile, the workshop will run from July 12th to August 16th, six weeks as usual. All other details the same as last year.
Kilmeny of the Ozarks says:
Gail, I've been wondering about your thoughts on self-publishing. Specifically the new ebook boom and the indie publishing that has sprung from it. Specifically after reading this book: http://www.amazon.com/Sold-Million-eBooks-Months-ebook/dp/B0056BMK6K/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1334319694&sr=8-2 Its by this guy named John Locke who actually did sell a million ebooks in five months. Just wondering about your thoughts on the matter! Thanks
Dragon-Dudette says:
I've looked into self-publishing a bit. It gives you more freedom to do what you want, but at the same time you have to promote it yourself, and it becomes more difficult to make your book have a professional feel. Standard publishing, from what I see, will give you less options on how your book should look (unless you have a name for yourself), but you're more likely to make it in the writing world.
Any other thoughts? I've been wondering about publishing for a long time and I'm still not sure which way I'd want to go.
Kilmeny of the Ozarks says:
For myself….I've been looking at it for around a year or so. Things have changed so drastically in just that time frame, and I think they're going to continue too. For one, I think self-publishing is getting more respect from people in general then they used too. Why the New York Times now publishes an Ebook Bestelling List where indie publishers are often on the charts! For now I think it depends on what you most want out of publishing. I like the idea of controlling everything about my books, connecting personally with readers through Twitter and other social media, and not having to give ANY of my rights away to anyone! If you self-publish you focus on that small percentage of people who really ARE your target audience. At least that's the gist of the John Locke Method. And obviously that can be just as rewarding as being a best-selling traditionally published author. I think I just like the personal touch of indie publishing.
gailcarsonlevine says:
Kilmeny of the Ozarks–I don't know. If you've read up on it, you may be better informed than I am. My only thought is that if you're going to go that route, you need to be willing to put out a lot of effort promoting your work. Anyone else want to weigh in?
Melissa says:
Gail- The way you always remind us to save what we write makes me wonder if you have anything you wrote in school or when you were younger???
gailcarsonlevine says:
I have very little, just a folder from high school. I wish I had more.
welliewalks says:
I am almost 16 and I'm making it my goal from now until next school year starts to try to get published (in magazines, etc)- TRY. I've been doing some research (I've gotten the 2012 and 2011 Writer's Market Guide which is amazing) but I was wondering if anyone here would have any resoureces or tips. Also places to submit. Thank you!! 🙂
kathleenrupff says:
Thank you, Gail! I'm new to your site / new to writing (seriously) and really enjoyed this post! Also just saw your husband's photography… WOW! Awesome photos of dear Reggie!
carpelibris says:
Welliewalks, if you write fantasy and/or SF, I'd suggest going to Ralan.com or Duotrope.com for market lists.
Offhand, I know that some of the Sam's Dot publications take work by younger authors. I think the Cricket group might, too.
You also might find some useful stuff on the "CL Favorites" page if you click on my name.
gailcarsonlevine says:
welliewalks and anyone else–I've mentioned this before: THE LOUISVILLE REVIEW has a Children's Corner and accepts submissions from kids in grades K through 12. Here's the link: http://www.louisvillereview.org/.
newblogger says:
Thanks for another fantastic post.This blog is the great platform to discuss about anything.Add some more articles like this. thanks.
peregrine trips
H.L.M. moore says:
That book sounds exciting! I have to read it sometime. I just want to tell you, I LOVE to write. Looking at your writing influence me in my storys. Right now I am making 1 called Wonders of the world. Honor:)