Saturday, November 6, 2021

Subtlety - An essay

 SUBTLETY

 

Rarely, if ever, has subtlety been brought up as a topic of discussion during our writing group meetings. I haven't come across subtlety in all the books I've read on writing.  Nevertheless, subtlety underlies much in writing consciously or otherwise. A few of these areas are sensitivity, foreshadowing, and description.

 

People are sensitive to ethnic and racial issues. In the political arena, it is all too prevalent. Writers don't wish to offend their readers, or at least most writers. Thus, subtlety is employed to convey those touchy points. It is difficult to delicately write historical fiction that depicts horrible treatment of people like the Blacks and the Indians. As we move up the time scale to contemporary times, those historical treatments that were the way of life become xenophobic and racist in their very mention. Writing a black character as dumb and lazy stereotypes blacks are all alike or if an Indian is a lazy drunk, all Indians are portrayed as drunks and lazy. Writing in that style isn't going to fly in today's world. Not without alienating a segment of readership.  No amount of subtlety will mask such concepts or maybe subtlety can. Many writers sidestep and omit possible offense from their writings by not writing about them.

 

They don't have to avoid writing on sensitivity issues if they deploy nuance to their character development. For instance, ignorance and stupidity are two widely different things. Many people equate the two as the same, and because a person isn’t aware of something, they are stupid. Generally, characters, real and imagined, who think this way are bullies who go by many names such as rednecks, skinheads, bloods, and gangbangers. Where in this scenario can subtlety be used? In the character arc.

 

People in real life don't change drastically at a moment's notice, epiphanies aside. In writing, an author exaggerates the traits of a bully or a victim to strengthen the emotional response sought. The writer builds subtle markers in character arcs to bring the characters back in line, regain the normal, or find a new normal.

 

Writing events in a story that move the characters along their arcs entails foreshadowing. In my mind, foreshadowing is where the reader derives the most joy from the story. Hardly is anything more gratifying to the reader than the moment when a subtle foreshadow is fulfilled.  Several mechanisms can be used for foreshadowing, some more obvious than others. Probably the most obvious and best known to writers is Chekhov's gun.

 

From Wikipedia:

"Chekhov's gun (Chekhov's rifle, Russian: Чеховское ружьё) is a dramatic principle that states that every element in a story must be necessary, and irrelevant elements should be removed. Elements should not appear to make "false promises" by never coming into play." 

 

From <https://www.bing.com/search?q=Chekov%27s+gun&form=ANNTH1&refig=c86bd283aa124854b28c927898fd6327>

 

One false promise is to introduce a weapon and never use it. Others are introducing an arsonist who never burns anything down, a womanizer who never dates, or a murderer who never kills anyone, and the list goes on.

 

Tension and or suspense are also the creations of foreshadowing. When the reader picks up on a subtle hint that may turn the story on its head, save the day for the protagonist or spell their doom, hope at what was hinted will or will not happen. We all like to be right. A foreshadow harbors in the back of the mind, and finally, the writer brings it out, the reader exclaims, "I knew it, I knew it!" It's a surprise. Not the kind of surprise like, "Where did that come from?", but more like, "Thank goodness, I was starting to worry."

 

The more subtle the foreshadowing is, the more satisfying for the reader when fulfilled. An excellent treatment for foreshadowing can be found in many 'how to' writing books. I particularly enjoyed studying Structuring your Novel Essential Keys for writing an outstanding story by K.M. Weiland. K.M. Weiland - Author of Historical and Speculative Fiction (kmweiland.com)

 

I think a concerted effort is required to use subtlety in foreshadowing. The writer must give the readers a certain amount of credit to pick up on veiled foreshadowing.

 

To round out the topic of today is subtlety in description. The writer wants the reader to visualize, to feel, to equate, and emote. Much like foreshadowing, the description shouldn't be force-fed, serving only to bog down the story or feel contrived. Subtlety can rule. There is no reason to reveal the color of the protagonist's hair until pertinent to the plot. Rather than having her look in the mirror and describe her hair, she can hope whoever is after her will not recognize the fresh dye job as she gathers loose blond strands from the sink to flush down the toilet. A detective may look at shoes in a closet and declare the man they seek is pigeon-toed by the wear of the soles. If the readers don't know what pigeon-toed is, they can look it up and learn a new thing.

 

Being subtle can only carry so far. Difficult for the writer to be delicate in describing a person being run through with a sword or the effect of a car slamming into a hundred-year-old Oak tree at sixty miles an hour. Those are defining events and not for finesse. Other than those stark moments in description like a nuclear bomb going off, subtlety is equally enjoyed by the reader.

 

Characters have roles to play. Many readers, I submit, most readers, like to picture a character of their own design. If the writer wants the storyline's purpose to describe a character in a certain way, the more subtle the depiction is, the more enjoyable the reading.

 

As writers, we carry a heightened awareness of the mechanisms used to convey a good story. Because of this awareness, the author/reader appreciates a well-written story. On the other hand, by reading many stories, readers conclude what they enjoy without being aware of the tools the writer deploys. Thus, readers develop a stable of favorite authors.

 

The use of subtlety will enhance and enrichen any story.


by Emmett J Hall 

Monday, June 28, 2021

Why did I write RUNAWAY

 


An interesting aspect to writing a novel that I hadn't anticipated when I wrote RUNAWAY is to be asked, Why did I write it? What is the message, the meaning?

The answer bears a bit of background before answering. To start, I have taken a series of creative writing classes at several different community colleges over the years. The story RUNAWAY was a short story written for one of those classes in the late 1970s. 

The teacher wanted it expanded. He had ideas he wanted me to explore, but time ran out. I had no design other than to write an interesting story for a class assignment. The years ticked away. People I let read the story wanted it expanded.

Finally, after retirement and submitting my story to a new writers group I was checking out. They critiqued the heck out of it. The overall censuses were they wanted it expanded. I will admit it. I was afraid. I didn't know what to do to create a novel. What- a chapter book. A daunting undertaking.  

Nevertheless, I pushed on. I started reading how-to books, Dean Koontz, Steven King,  K.M. Weiland, and others while I continued to write. I learned new concepts and when I went back to check my writing I found I was a bit of a natural for story creation and didn't require much in the way of fixing plot, character arcs, or world-building. My Achilles heel was and is still grammar, fixable if the bones are good. 

I think all novelists have some idea of what the purpose of their book is going to be about. Be that of a brain twister like mystery, or a shocker as in horror or tension ladened like in a thriller. My story is historical fiction set in 1936. It has been compared to a cross between John Steinbeck and Dashiell Hammond. I think of it as more Gulliver's travels without the fantasy part. Yet, the story has tragedy, sacrifice, murder, and mentorship for a fifteen-year-old forced to grow up quickly. 

Time to answer the questions. Why,  what are the purpose and message? The overlying theme was things are not as they always seem. Bad people have good traits, good people have conflicts, and evil people have their reasons. For a fifteen-year-old, naïve and vulnerable, a mentor for good can be important. For a teenager that reads this, I hope the takeaway is - to have patience. The young tend to knee-jerk reactions. My boy in this story suffers from this. 

Did I plan this? Yes and no. I had these life lessons I wanted to weave into the story in the back of my mind, and they fleshed out on the page as I wrote.  For the most part, I had young adults in mind as I wrote, but is good reading for parents as well for most of the concepts can be applied to raising their children. 

What good is a meaningful message unless delivered in an engaging manner?  A subjective answer. The texture of the period is well put. The internal and external dialogues revealing and believable. A fellow writer in my writers' group commented my writing is like the Norman Rockwell of literature. There, so much for horn tooting. You can read the story description by searching Emmett J Hall on Amazon. 


Subtlety - An essay

 SUBTLETY   Rarely, if ever, has subtlety been brought up as a topic of discussion during our writing group meetings. I haven't come...