The Key To Great Writing
#Writing
While there is no common definition of great, all great books have the
common feature of lacking content that isn’t great. Great writing does not
contain “un-great” stuff.
The Internet is
full of tips to improve your writing. Do this. Do that. Add this. Add that.
Brainstorm this. Flesh out that. Adopt this structure. The list goes on and on
and is full of wonderful and sound pieces of proven literary advice.
There is so much
advice and knowledge accumulated over the ages, yet no one seems to fully agree
on what makes great writing. It is more that we just know it when we read it.
And many cannot agree on that either – think of all the rejection letters
great writers have gotten from publishers. Think about the fact that we all
have different favorite books. Some are perennially popular and historically
important as evidenced by how they converge within “Top Books” lists. Whether
it is Meyer’s Twilight saga or Dante’s Inferno, some books just stand out head and
shoulders above the rest.
Great writing can
have one or more great features, such as a super plot, memorable characters, or
incredible novelty. There is no one formula. If there were, everyone would use
it. That is the beauty of writing: It is endlessly creative. The door is always
wide open.
If there is no one
formula, how can there be one key to great writing?
The secret that
accounts for all this diversity of writers, writing styles, and books with high
impact is that it is as much what you do as what you don’t do. While there is
no common definition of great, all great books have the common feature of
lacking content that isn’t great. Great books do not contain “un-great” stuff.
Yes, this is an
equally nebulous but strict rule. It is a realization that great writing is in
equal measure about what you write as what you don’t write. In this way, it is
analogous to the concept of negative space in art and design.
Authors are free to
include any content, contrived and formed in any way, as long as it is
pleasing, meaningful, challenging, educational, or transformative – or at
best, all of these. All great books contain strengths that compel readers to
finish and remember them. What advances them further is that they lack the
kinds of weaknesses that turn readers away. The best loved books will be those
that reach the highest possible ratio of pleasing to unpleasing material.
This is,
admittedly, a fickle concept. A great book to one person could be a total bore
to another. The definition of “great” can change over time and in different
contexts. Many famous authors were originally rejected by publishers or the
public and later embraced, sometimes by the next or even a distant generation.
Many celebrated authors or books have come to be all but forgotten over time.
The perceived worth of books changes not because the words change, but because
popular perceptions of what constitutes “great” and “less-than-great” do.
So, it might be
troublesome to define “great” since the palette can be so vast, but many will
agree on what is “un-great.” The things on this list can easily be fixed, so
their presence should not hold anyone back indefinitely. A good editor can see
when a great book lurks within and knows it is just a matter of time and effort
to pull it out. Get your book to publication only after it has been critically
evaluated and cleansed of these eight weaknesses.
1. The usual
suspects
Banish grammar
mistakes, typos, weak verbs, etc. These are the same kinds of things that we are
taught in elementary school to avoid in our writing. If this is the only
problem in your book, congratulations. A good copy-editor can easily magic them
all away. These are the most superficial weaknesses in the history of writing,
but also the least likely to find in a published book of great quality.
2. Inconsistencies
These gaffes are
nominally more serious than the mechanical errors of writing but are clues you
have not spent much time perfecting your writing. They are fundamentally
disallowed, as the point of a good book is to get the reader to suspend
disbelief. If your lead leaves the house with his favorite umbrella because the
weather forecast says 100% chance of rain, you can’t later have him get
drenched because he forgot his umbrella. If your lead is wearing a black shirt
at the beginning of the day, it should still be black at the end. As we all
know, even great movies can have lapses, and YouTube has a cult built around
finding visual errors. Inconsistencies do not always ruin a great movie, or
book, but it’s best if they aren’t there.
3. Problems of
logic
Sometimes behaviors
or outcomes that seem to defy logic make books. Take, for example, the battered
wife who inexplicably won’t leave her abusive husband in the first chapter. If
done right, readers will be unduly curious to learn in later chapters the
reasons that compel this smart woman to stay and will root for her to overcome,
setting up a great ending. Stretching what is possible for a reader to imagine
is core to many great books, the trick being never to exceed readers’
expectations of logical consistency. Authors retain full freedom to craft any
possible world. If something happens that is illogical, you just need to
explain it. If a ball rolls uphill, make sure your characters are on a planet
somewhere with different physics.
4. Ignorance of the
facts
I always loved that
part in the Lion King trailer where the leaf-cutter ants walk across the
branch. The fact that lions live in Africa and leaf-cutter ants are endemic to
the Americas doesn’t bother most people. More serious lapses do. Serious
conflicts with common-knowledge facts are almost never seen in mainstream books
or movies – or they would garner ridicule. Lack of attention to historical or
social context can be especially frustrating to people who know it better than
the author.
Being knowledgeable
about the world you are depicting is essential because it speaks to your
authority, a key aspect of allowing readers to suspend disbelief. If Harry is a
rooster, you really shouldn’t have him lay eggs to heighten the humor when he
gets scared by Lola the Lion. Factual issues can be fixed if you take the time:
drop the eggs or make Harry a Henrietta. The only time a true rethink is
triggered is when a key part of the plot rests on a false assumption. Then you
have a deeper problem. Luckily, much good fiction rests on twisting,
stretching, and reimagining the truth.
5. Extraneous or
repetitive material
If readers have
plunged into your story, they want you to stay on track. Tangential or completely
irrelevant material will slow down the story at best and completely frustrate a
reader to the point of putting the book down at worst. A special subclass of
extraneous material is repetitious text (words, sentences, or passages).
Repetition occurs in the process of writing, and for many legitimate reasons.
Leaving it in for readers to stumble over is one of the worst possible writing
transgressions.
Readers are smart
and they only need to read something once to get it. If you do restate
something, elaborate upon it to give new information and you are safer that it
will be received with increasing curiosity. Intentional repetition signals
importance and can be an incredibly powerful tool to guide your reader where
you want them to go. Themes that emerge over the course of a book, duly
explored and core to the plot, are often one of the highlight features of a
great book.
6. Confusing
material
Confusion is never
intentional but most often results from the author not having clearly described
something. Perhaps enough time was not taken because of the complexity of the
mood, scene, feeling, or description of a physical object or process.
Often writers are
completely surprised to be told when a point in the story is not clear. They
experience it so clearly in their minds, but likely they have more background
knowledge. More experienced writers will recognize the problem, smile and say
something like, “yeah, I had trouble with that.” Perhaps the writer just hasn’t
thought out all the details and the vagueness or ambiguities still show.
Readers will often fill in details you don’t tell them, and it could take them
in a direction you never expected.
7. Flat material
How to describe
flat material except that everyone knows “flat” when they read it? This is like
a bin for all writing that doesn’t fit into any of these other categories but
is just obviously lacking in its ability to fire up and hold the attention of a
reader. It is flat because it flags no emotions in the reader, doesn’t advance
the plot, and feels very different than the great parts. As such, it really
serves no purpose.
8. Lack of novelty
All writers try to
avoid clichés at all cost. It is rare to see downright plagiarism, but readers
are very sensitive to whether a book feels novel or whether it rehashes
too-familiar ground. If they get the sense they’ve read it all before, chances
are they’ll move onto something else.
While the rule
holds that great books lack this kind of chaff, the reverse does not hold.
Producing a book without any of these weaknesses still does not guarantee it
will be great. It just gives it a better chance. When the ratio is as high in
favor of great as it can be, the book is ready to be birthed.
Source:
Thanks. Enjoyed the tips and will definitely use some of them. I like the flow of ideas in this article. Keep at it.
ReplyDeleteHi Martin,thanks so much for reading the post. I hope you enjoyed it.
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