NYT: What to write when you’re stuck

(via Stuart Silverstone; thanks!)
By COLSON WHITEHEAD

I recently published a novel, and now it’s time to get back to work. If
you’re anything like me, figuring out what to write next can be a real
hassle. A flashy and experimental brain-bender, or a pointillist examination
of the dissolution of a typical American family? Generation-spanning
door-stopper or claustrophobic psychological sketch? Buncha novellas with a
minor character in common? To make things easier, I modified my dartboard a
few years ago. Now, when I’m overwhelmed by the untold stories out there, I
head down to the basement, throw a dart and see where it lands. Try it for
yourself!

Encyclopedic Have you ever thought, There is a system that rules our
culture, and this system also determines interaction on the individual
level, and I have come up with a metaphor that describes both
manifestations, and can provide many examples? If so, you may be postmodern,
or postmodern-curious. E. M. Foster said, “Only connect,” and Lauryn Hill
seconded him, maintaining that “everything is everything.” They aren’t
postmodernists, but that’s the beauty of the postmodern ― it’s not what it
is, it’s what you say it is.

Realism Take this test. When you read “These dishes have been sitting in the
sink for days,” do you think (a) This is an indicator of my inner weather,
or (b) Why don’t they do the dishes? Does the phrase “I’m going as far away
from here as my broken transmission will get me, and then I’ll take it from
there” make you think (a) Somebody understands me, or (b) Why don’t they
stay and talk it out? What is more visually appealing, (a) a Pall Mall butt
floating in a coffee mug, or (b) those new Pop Art place mats in the Crate &
Barrel catalog? If you answered (a), do we have a genre for you.

Recommended for: The rumpled, drinky.

Ist Simply add -ist to any oddball or unlikely root word, and run with it.
You’d be surprised.

Ethnic Bildungsroman Your parents packed their bags and took a chance on a
dream called America. From Eastern Europe and the Mediterranean, Bangladesh
and Beijing. Then you came along, with all your surly second-
generation-ness, and you wondered, Why do they eat that food, their accent
is so heavy, why can’t they leave me alone and let me play baseball? For you
are not like them, you Old World-eschewing, Otherness-contemplating,
bubble-gum-popping, shiksa-smooching, WASP bastion- charging, bootstrapping
young thing. You got moxie, kid, and just like Mary Tyler Moore, you’re
gonna make it after all.

Sample titles: “From Here, but Also Not”; “Annette Lipshitz for President.”

About A Little Known Historical Fact Possession is nine-tenths of the law.
Find a little-known atrocity and claim squatter’s rights. Get in there so no
one can take your lynching, massacre or overlooked genocide away from you.
People like to be educated about tragedies that they’ve never shaken their
heads sadly over before. Getting them to say “I didn’t know about that” is a
surprisingly effective marketing tool. Practice speaking mellifluously ―
you’re going to be doing a lot of NPR.

Sample titles: “The Gridleysville Account”; “Shout! The Forgotten People.”

Fabulism Ladies with wings and men without mouths. Dancing trees and
talkative cows. If it’s for kids, it’s a fairy tale. If it’s for grown-ups,
it’s magic realism! Whether you’re 8 or 80, everybody loves magic. This is
the perfect genre for writers who may be tempted to throw out manuscript
pages when they get stuck ― with magic realism, you can just conjure up a
flaming tornado and whisk troublesome characters away. “Where’s Jasper?”
“Remember that legend I mentioned 25 pages ago, about the Flaming Tornado of
Red Creek?”

Historical Novel Sweeping. . . . Meticulously researched. . . . Something
about verandas. Welcome to the world of the historical novel. This is
different from a book About a Little Known Historical Fact in that you’re
taking a recognizable event or milieu, familiar from PBS documentaries and
Oscar-winning movies, and putting your own spin on it. If you get sick of
those tedious period details (gas-lamp, chamber-pot, chandler ― oy!),
consider cutting between the past and the present, where the narrator
discovers information about some ancestor’s role in things. Throw in a
real-life famous person ― Jimmy Hoffa, Emma Goldman, the Lindbergh baby ―
and watch the sparks fly.

Allegory This book is about the Black Death . . . or is it?

Sample titles: “The Forest”; “The Mound”; “The Illness”; “The Cubby”; “The
Lump.”

Domestic Why is Timmy spending so much time with his door closed? Did I hear
Janet sneaking out last night? Bert’s always working late these days, it’s
like I hardly see him. Jamie has started another affair ― she’s one of my
best friends but I don’t know what she’s thinking sometimes. I guess it all
began that fateful night when my car broke down.

Recommended for: People who stumble upon their muse in Aisle 8 of Whole
Foods.

Thriller Nothing wrong with putting a little food on the table, especially
in these times of economic uncertainty.

Recommended for: Those who know only five adjectives, but know them really
well.

Southern Novel of Black Misery Africans in America, cut your teeth on this
literary staple. Slip on your sepia-tinted goggles and investigate the
legacy of slavery that still reverberates to this day, the legacy of
Reconstruction that still reverberates to this day, and crackers. Invent
nutty transliterations of what you think slaves talked like. But hurry up ―
the hounds are a- gittin’ closer!

Sample titles: “I’ll Love You Till the Gravy Runs Out and Then I’m Gonna
Lick Out the Skillet”; “Sore Bunions on a Dusty Road.”

Southern Novel of White Misery, OR Southern Novel What race problem?

Sample titles: “The Birthing Stone”; “The Gettin’ Place.”

Social Realism You: A canny observer in a white suit and a fine cravat. The
Culture: Just waiting for someone to explain it to itself. When these two
krazy kidz get together, it’s zeitgeist! Dig in and tell people how they
really live today. Convince the reader that your ear is attuned to the
modern vernacular, that your nose sniffs the tang of changing mores, and
that your fingers are on the pulse of our time, somewhere around the neck,
to better choke the life out of it. Hold up a mirror to our society, or at
least to the lives of book critics who will write that your book “holds up a
mirror to our society.” You’re not done until you come up with at least one
spot-on description that enters the national vocabulary. Here are some
freebies to start you off: “cyber galoots,” “walking kabobs,” “electric
ninnies.” But please, please, please ― know when you’re too old to pull it
off.

Sample titles: “Yonder Lies the Glittery City”; “Sotto Voce.”

Remember, this is only a partial list ― there are literally dozens of kinds
of books out there waiting for the right writer to come along. Step right
up, and see what happens. It works for me.

Colson Whitehead’s novels include “The Intuitionist” (ist) and “John Henry
Days” (encyclopedic). His most recent book is “Sag Harbor.”
November 1, 2009
Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/01/books/review/Whitehead-t.html

copyblogger: How to write with a knife

Outstanding writing advice from copyblogger:

Think it’s impossible to write with a knife?

Not at all. You might even say it’s essential.

Well, to be more precise, no one actually writes with a knife. But good writers do edit with one.

For them, writing involves two separate but closely intertwined mindsets: crafting their message and then cutting away everything that’s not their message.

Yesterday, Jon Morrow talked about why you need to tighten up your writing. Today we’re going to talk about how.

Write for yourself, edit for your readers

Really good writing always begins with the desire for self-expression. Let your mind and heart say what they want without restriction. You’re rough-hewing the shape of your thoughts.

But once the broad contours have emerged in your first draft, you take your knife and carve off all the extra bits. Sculpt your article until the important details are clear, not hidden by chunks of irrelevant or uninteresting verbiage.

It isn’t easy. As writers, we all have a tendency to fall in love with our words. So here are seven tips to help you cut to the chase.

1. Find the spine of your content and stick to it

A blog post is a focused piece of writing — it shouldn’t aim to address more than one tightly focused topic.

Yes, that story about your telecommuting co-worker and her embarrassing webcam moment is pretty darn funny. But if you can’t make it 100% relevant to the point you’re trying to make, don’t use it.

You can’t make your audience chuckle if they’ve clicked away.

More

A book-writing portal

Phuket, Thailand 12/26/04

On a beautiful clear day in Phuket, the water started coming in, like the tide–and just didn’t stop. Not a big crashing wave; just water, rising, and not stopping. The in-and-out motion of the horrendous waves that destroyed so many and so much all over that part of world, the violent breakers–they were not in evidence at first.

That was December 26, 2004. I hope you will pardon the dramatic metaphor, but that is what I see happening to book publishing. Control is shifting inexorably out of the hands of the publisher into those of the author. It’s not a huge breaker, but it is a tidal wave. The economic shifts have only just begun. No traditional publisher will be left unchanged; many will not survive the shift.

You probably know what’s doing it: The Internet; print-on-demand machinery and services; “pay for production only when you sell a book” services like Lulu.com and  (Amazon’s entry); and the subtle but pervasive spread of the “information wants to be free” meme.

Marketing guru Seth Godin publishes first for free, in PDF, on the Web; then he offers print copies. Fiction writers like Cory Doctorow put their stories out for free.

The “back end”–going from PDF to printed book–has already been revolutionized by Lulu.com and its ilk. But the process of creating a book, with its cycles of collaboration, design, editing, revision, has still not changed much.

Now comes FastPencil, which I have dubbed a “book-writing portal.” The company is a Silicon Valley startup, funded in December, 2008, and already ahead of schedule in terms of revenues.

“We’re an end-to-end toolset for anyone who wants to write, publish, distribute a book, built on top of a social network,” says CTO and founder Michael “Mash” Ashley, who used to publish and sell surf maps to avid surfers. “I got the idea through an experience my mother had. She wanted to write and publish a children’s book, mainly to read to my daughter, and was totally frustrated by the obstacles to getting a book out. So I took the manuscript from her and got 100 copies published.”

“She was moved to tears. It was her dream, come true! But what I hadn’t foreseen was the reaction of all our relatives, gathered for Christmas that year. They ALL had a book in them that they wanted to publish! That’s what planted the idea in me for FastPencil,” said Ashley.

FastPencil is a collaborative portal. You set up writing projects, invite people to participate. It saves and manages successive versions. When you are ready, you examine the publishing alternatives FastPencil offers.

Here’s what the site says: “Through a process we call Guided Collaboration, you can bring in new acquaintances and old friends to help you turn your idea into a masterpiece. At any point in the process you can connect with like-minded people, share knowledge, chat, gather feedback from reviewers and editors, and collaborate with other authors, all without leaving FastPencil.”

When your masterpiece is complete, you can get it edited; get a cover designed; publish it electronically and in hard copy; get it to Amazon.com and Barnes & Noble; all without leaving the site.

Use of the portal is free. They make money when you buy services from them, such as publishing.

Check it out. And friend me there. Surf the tsunami.

“This is Your Brain on Music”

I just finished This is Your Brain on Music, by Daniel Levitin. It is an amazing book, for several reasons:

  • Levitin was a rock music ;erformer and producer before deciding to study musicology and neuroscience, so his examples are hip and personal. But he is an eclectic lover of music, and his references to classical music are equally knowledgeable and evocative.
  • The book addresses aspects of a question that has troubled me since my childhood: Why does some music make us happy and other music makes us sad? How universal are its effects?
  • Levitin is a wonderful scientist, who is able to express strong beliefs while clearly representing opposing views.
  • The writing is excellent.

I think the layout could have used a bit more “air.” Paragraphs are very long, and often made me feel a need to take a deep breath before proceeding.

It’s an old saw and true: If you want to write well, read lots of good writing. This book will help.

Words of wisdom for writers from Alan Watts

A sweet movie with narration from recordings of philosopher Alan Watts:

Come to my free teleseminar this Thursday

Thinking about your book? Wondering how to get it out there? Come to my (no-cost) 30-minute teleseminar, “Your Book — Easier Than You Thought!”

It’s this Thursday, March 26, at 7pm Pacific.

I will show you…

  • Why you need a book of your own;
  • What having a book can do for your business;
  • The truth about publishers–and publishing;
  • What, exactly, it will take for you to have your
  • own book;
  • Joel’s simple secret to getting your book done.

I’m PASSIONATE about helping you get your book DONE and available!