Books by Melissa Bowersock

Thursday, January 22, 2015

Recalculating ...

I was recently asked to beta-read the first chapter of a new book. I understood going in that this was a rough draft, so I wasn’t really expecting perfection, but it had several glitches that got me thinking about GPS.

Huh?

Okay, bear with me.

I’ve rewritten and paraphrased some of what I read, but here’s the gist of it.
Ramrod stepped out of his spotless 2014 black Hummer and surveyed his new purchase. The concrete and steel condo rose up in front of him, its austere sense of security distinctly satisfying to him. This was the perfect place for him to pursue his obsession: flower-arranging. Except for his collection of Samurai swords, nothing gave him more pleasure than the delicate, meditative hobby he had practiced in secret for over 20 years. It would now be the secure base for his work, and no one would ever know about his alter-ego.
As we read, we generally find that the writing steers us in certain directions. One sentence leads to the next; each sentence builds on the one before to create a fluid forward motion. But with this sample, I found myself stutter-stepping backward and forward over and over, having to re-read and refigure what the author was trying to say.

It reminded me of a GPS unit that is constantly saying, “Recalculating.”


Here’s the process I went through:

Ramrod stepped out of his spotless 2014 black Hummer (lots of detail here—must be an important item) and surveyed his new purchase (the Hummer). The concrete and steel condo (oh, wait—recalculating. It’s not the Hummer that’s the new purchase, it’s the condo. Okay, got it.) rose up in front of him, its austere sense of security distinctly satisfying to him. This was the perfect place for him to pursue his obsession: flower-arranging. Except for his collection of Samurai swords, nothing gave him more pleasure than the delicate, meditative hobby he had practiced in secret for over 20 years. It would now be the secure base for his work (Recalculating—the last important noun was the hobby; but apparently It is referring back to the condo.), and no one would ever know about his alter-ego.

Reading a story should not require that much effort. As a writer, I believe my job is to lay down a nice, smooth highway that is paved with words, and my reader should be able to zoom down that highway in their readingmobile without so much as a pebble in the way. Any obstruction in the road, any detour in the story stops the reader and forces them to recalculate—to go back and try to figure out what, exactly, the writer is trying to say. Not only has the reader been knocked off that nice new highway, but now they actually have to go back and see what the problem was and even repair it—rewording the errant sentence or at least understanding it in a different context—before they can continue on so the story will make sense. After hitting two or three or five potholes like that, the reader is probably not going to be so keen on making this trip after all.

They may just take the next offramp and go find a smoother story road.



Originally published by Indies Unlimited on July 24, 2013

4 comments:

  1. Just had to drop by and tell you that this made me laugh. The GPS is such a great analogy. It would seem that this is the product of a novice writer who hasn't yet figured out that just because he/she knows the story, the reader has no idea what is going on in his/her head:)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks, Jacquie, glad you got a chuckle out of it. I think you're absolutely right about the difference between what's in our heads and what we put on paper, so it's a cautionary tale to all of us to make sure we're leading the reader where we want them to go. When I'm writing, I'm constantly monitoring that, aware of how much of the story is in my head and how much I'm divulging to the reader. It's a balancing act, for sure.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I love the "recalculating"! So true...

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thanks, Lorraine. That's exactly how my brain feels.

    ReplyDelete