Getting it Right by Ann Evans
Recently I've been
reading a lot of other people's work – stories by school
children that I'd met on school visits who are hugely keen to be writers;
another is a friend who's written a short novel about his travels;
then there are 101 other pieces – yes 101 exactly, which are entries for a competition I'm judging – all requiring critiques.
I get a fee for the
competition, but whether you're getting paid to provide help with
writing skills or not, there's nothing better than seeing someone's
writing coming on in leaps and bounds - particularly after following
your advice.
I love doing workshops in
schools and I'm often massively impressed by the standard of writing that can be achieved by
youngsters as young as eight and nine with a little extra support and
help. As for adults, I hope my courses have helped people, even if only to get them making time to write.
The satisfaction of
giving others a helping hand on their writing path probably boils
down to my early days of trying to write for publication and the
multitude of errors I made along the way. It took years of learning
by my mistakes before I could grasp what I was doing wrong. Take for example
something as simple as getting the punctuation around dialogue
correct. It's second nature now but such a common fault among newbies.
In my early days, I
didn't know my punctuation was haywire, not until one kind (or frazzled) editor
pointed this out to me in a rejection letter. I can still remember
blushing with embarrassment as I realised I'd been making such a
basic error for – well, ages!
When doing school
talks, I often recount this little anecdote to the children, who are
usually aghast to hear that a real live author was once as rubbish at
punctuation as they are. My talks also recount my long struggle to get a first novel published, and how I
wrote six different romance novels, labouring over each one, year
after year; excitedly sending them off, systematically getting them
back... the lesson here being the need for perseverance.
Sometimes one of the children will ask what I've done with these old manuscripts and I
inform them that one has since been re-written and published, but as
for the others, they are lost in a dusty old attic never to see the light of day again.
Until.... a couple of
weeks ago, my ex husband brought round a box full of my old writings which
he'd discovered in our old and dusty attic! Stuff I'd written as a
real novice 30 odd years ago!
Among the yellowed
pages of carbon-copied stories, was a ring binder containing one of
those early romantic novels. I was so excited to read it after all this time. (And amazed I'd valued it so highly as to store it in a ring binder.) I'd totally
forgotten what the story was about. However, I ended up groaning at all the clichés - not to mention the dodgy behaviour of the hero! And
surprise surprise – those dratted punctuation mistakes around the dialogue.
At the time I'd
really thought I'd got it right! But this was exactly what I pull
people up for these days. If only someone had told me sooner. I truly thank God for that editor who took the trouble to point out the error
of my ways.
Writing is certainly a
craft that takes years to master – not that I've mastered it yet - you never stop learning. But it's a craft that can be learned. So what I've done is to write my
guide to becoming a writer, bringing into play all the things I've learned over 30 plus years.
It's called Become a Writer – A
Step by Step Guide. It's coming out as a POD and an Ebook this
summer. I made the deliberate choice not to approach a traditional publisher, because this is all mine - what I've learned over the years, and what I find works. My ethos being – read
this and avoid years of learning the hard way!
My new book, out soon. Cover by Rob Tysall (www.tysallsphotography.org.uk) |
I wonder what common
mistakes other writers made in their early writing days.
www.annevansbooks.co.uk
Comments
Here's something by a writer and critic I admire, M. John Harrison:
'First you need to make your technique unconscious, so you can do it without thinking about it. Then you choose to make it conscious again, and that gets you on the learning curve. Your goal is to make fiction seem as if no effort has gone into writing it; also that no effort is required by the reader.'
I'm not sure that I agree with him entirely about goal, but he does emphasise that fiction should only seem effortless, both to writer and reader. In fact, he doesn't much hold with adults reading only for escape.
I feel that many, many writers disappoint - even fail - because they reach the stage of unconscious technique and never move beyond it.