Click
Here
for more articles |
|
|
Once
upon a time.Reflections on storytelling
|
by:
Sheila
J. Williams |
We
are the storytellers: our days begin with
"once upon a time" and end with "tell me
a story". We are descended from the folks
who sat around the fires at night, describing
the hunt for those who stayed behind. Today,
the storyteller's role has evolved to tell
us which laundry detergent to use or car
to buy and how to choose a financial planner.
The storyteller makes us laugh during the
sitcom. He persuades us by writing political
speeches or she entertains us with a story
about a woman who runs away from home. The
storyteller's job is to inform, educate,
entertain, provoke and inspire. Our tools
are words. Whether the collection of words
becomes a poem, TV commercial, novel or
political speech, the storyteller uses many
of the same techniques today as she or he
did in 1400 BCE.
1. On your first draft, put the editor/censor/minister
and OPP (other peoples' opinions) in a closet
and lock the door. Don't let them out! Write
the story using the words that you want
to use, the characters that work for you
and the situations that you like. Get your
ideas down on paper so that they breathe
for you -then begin the revision process.
You can't write a story if you censor yourself
or question a character or a point of view
because a Puritan minister is leaning over
your shoulder. Tell him to get lost and
write your story in your own way. Let him
back in only if he serves your purposes
and the story's purposes, not his.
2. Make it plain. The words can be witty,
complicated and suitable for a doctoral
dissertation but if the reader doesn't understand
the message, you've failed. The storyteller's
role is to communicate. Make sure that you
use the most precise language that you can.
The simplest words can be the best ones.
The second part of this rule is: Make sure
that your reader can follow your story.
If you drop bread crumbs to show the way,
the reader, like Hansel and Gretel, will
get lost. Surprises and twists in a plot
are great - but not if the reader has lost
the thread of the story.
No tears in the writer, no tears in the
reader. --Robert Frost
3. Make them feel it. Use the words that
make you cry or laugh, the words that make
you squirm, want to put your fist through
a wall or crawl under the covers. Use words
that convey smell and texture, light and
color. The reader should experience the
story. If you feel it when you write it,
chances are, the reader will feel it, too.
4. Know your characters. What's in their
wallet? You should know your characters
intimately even if you don't communicate
everything that you know about them to your
reader. Create a back story. What is in
their wallets? Do they have a lot of credit
cards or none? Do they live in an apartment
or own a home? Are they neat-freaks? What
do they keep in their refrigerator: six
packs or soy milk? Are there lots of empty
liquor bottles in the garbage can? What's
in the bathroom medicine cabinet? Prescription
pills or aspirin? How do they dress? Does
he or she date? What about children? Your
characters should be dimensional: with lives,
personalities and dirty socks.
5. When you've hit a wall on a section or
character - write a "test chapter". This
suggestion comes from my friend, Lynn Hightower,
a Shamus-award winning writer. I've used
it many times and it always helps. Example:
you've written chapter four using the first
person point of view but, in your head,
you are hearing a provocative third person
voice and you like the way that it sounds.
Should you re-write the piece using the
third person POV? Split the piece up with
a little of each? What to do? Save the chapter
that you've written and then write the same
chapter using the voice that's in your head.
By the time you've finished the exercise,
you'll have a pretty good idea which way
you'll want to go.
6. There are times when the words don't
come, times when the dialogue dries up,
the ideas disappear and you couldn't find
a "the" if your life depended on it. Some
people call this "writer's block" but I
think that you need a vacation. Take a walk,
go to a movie, get away from the words for
awhile and give yourself a break. The storyteller
is TIRED! Refresh your body, your mind and
your creative spirit, then return to the
words and begin again.
Copyright © 2005 Sheila Williams
About the author:
Sheila Williams is the author of the forthcoming
novel On the Right Side of a Dream (April
2005; $12.95US; 0-345-46475-3) as well as
Dancing on the Edge of the Roof and The
Shade of My Own Tree all by Ballantine/OneWorld.
Ms. Williams was born in Columbus, Ohio,
and attended Ohio Wesleyan University and
the University of Louisville. She and her
husband have two grown children and make
their home in Northern Kentucky.
For more information, please visit the author's
Web site at www.sheilajwilliams.com
Circulated by Bandoni
Media
|
|