|
Now, let me see if I have this straight - you're showing me the third and fourth paragraphs of the story, right? I already saw the first two, so we're just continuing.
It's hard for me to know what you're writing about - the Davidsons, the Shermans, the town, the party, the politics, the menus (what's "an Obama cocktail"?).
You're all over the place, pushing and squeezing and crunching all sorts of information into sentences until there's no room for consideration of what's going on. I'm overwhelmed with "facts," but they're of no use to me because I have no frame of reference into which I can place them, since all I know is that there's a party, there was another party in November, the town has all sorts of things going on that may or may not relate to this party, some people at the party don't like the hosts, and the Shermans are there for some reason.
No.
It's sloppy.
You're doing something that we all do when we're starting out and unsure of ourselves, and that is to WRITE! You're putting down one-liners as fast as you can, bumper stickers, gas-guzzlers, libraries, book banning (which was the only interesting thing in the list - that might be the story you should write), as if you're afraid to get to the real story. Throwing down obfuscation that does nothing to forward the story.
Remember this about writing fiction - you need to respect the narrative arc. Everything you put into the story must move it forward. You can't just stop and prattle on about libraries and hybrids - you have to advance the narrative, and there are a variety of ways to do it. But, the characters you introduce in the beginning - if there's a single protagonist, then the "character" - must undergo a change during the story and be a different person, however slightly, when the story concludes.
Put it down, walk away from it, and go back to what I said about two different stories. Decide what you're going to write about.
The Davidsons?
A dinner party?
The Shermans?
The town?
Then, pick one and write about it. Write as much and as well as you can about it, and you just might find, once you're finished, that you're ready to write about the next topic, and then the next, and then you might have what could conceivably be seen as a great big outline, you can put it all together, and you just might have a great big coherent and wonderful story.
But you've got to get what John Gardener (and, no, I wasn't a big fan of his) called 'dirt' out of your writing - dirt being defined as "matter out of place." Your job as the writer is to create a believable atmosphere within which your characters can move and experience and grow - or shrink. But, they must undergo change as the story progresses.
Stop telling. You're writing a narrative, but the real interest is in showing the reader, not telling.
Remember grade school history classes? Remember how boring they were because - if you had teachers like I had - all they did was throw dates and facts at you. It was miserable and hard and boring and no fun at all.
But, imagine if that same history class had been biographies of the people involved, and we got to see where they lived, what they did, who they were, who they loved, what and who they ate, and how it all came together to send them around the Cape of Good Hope, or whatever it was they went and did!
That's what you want to do with your writing. That's what I'm trying to explain, and probably not doing a very good job of it since I just woke up (yes, I do sleep until noon).
Here's the hardest part of being a writer: put away everything you've written and start over.
See what happens.
And check in with me anytime, here or PM or carrier pigeon...........................
|