"The Good Fight" Release Week - Post Two

RELEASE WEEK POST TWO

The Good Fight (Time Served #3) by Julianna Keyes




WANT VS NEED

In my second year of university I took a creative writing class. You had to submit samples and be accepted, so getting in made me feel very elite and accomplished. The class was hard. And because I’m a keener, I tended to be the only person who actually completed assignments and then brought in the requisite number of copies for everyone to read…and critique. You know what it means when no one else brings in their copies? That the whole class is devoted you…and critiquing you.

They were mostly pretty nice. We were all young and new and everyone thought I was brave (or dumb) for always bringing in my stuff. I mean, bringing in your stuff was the rule and I’m not sure that any of those people passed the class, but it was a pretty soft introduction to learning how to take criticism. Until one day I wrote a poem. I’m not a poet but it was the assignment, and one freezing winter day I was walking home and I passed a tree with a handful of birds sitting on bare branches, their silhouettes still and pretty against the horizon. I wrote a poem about that. I spaced out the lines and used only one comma as punctuation. I thought it was pretty great. After everyone sat silently and read it (and I chewed off nine of my fingernails) the instructor looked at me. “Why did you do that?” she asked. I stared at her blankly. “Do what?” “Write it like this. The spacing. Only one comma, no periods?” I didn’t know what to say. I just…did it. Because I wanted to.

I’d like to tell you I came up with a brilliant answer to her question, but I just sat there helplessly until some kind soul changed the subject. But that moment stuck with me. “Because I wanted to” is not a good enough answer. Did I need to? The truth is, I spaced it like that because that’s how the birds looked. Why the no periods? I don’t know. I thought that was poetry. But I learned a valuable lesson: have a reason. Wanting is not enough. Why does my poem/story/song need to be written this way?

I tend to write single POV stories because I don’t think they need two POVs. Do people want two POVs? Sure, I see that comment often, sometimes for my books, sometimes for others. But so much of the time I read dual POV that feels unnecessary, it’s just an opportunity to tell the reader what they want to hear, and I don’t think that does anybody—the author, the reader, the characters—any favours. Don’t tell me that you want it. Tell me why you need it. The challenge I enjoy about single POV is that it forces me to get creative when writing the other characters’ actions and dialogue. I have to think of new ways to convey that information without simply feeding it to you through an internal monologue. I like that challenge as an author, and I respect it as a reader.

Now let’s take a moment to sing the chorus of the Rolling Stones song we’re all suddenly dying to hear: You can’t always get what you want/But if you try sometime/You just might find/You get what you need.
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Published on July 26, 2016 08:25 Tags: critiquing, pov, the-good-fight, writing
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message 1: by Kim (new)

Kim I think people want dual POV because they can't get it in real life. You never really and truly know what the other person in your life is thinking or feeling. Being able to have it in a fictional romance gives them comfort. Personally, I'm ambivalent.

Thank you for writing! I loved "Undecided" and I'm sorry you felt the need/pressure to change the cover. I understand the confusion surrounding "is it a love triangle", but I also understand where you were going with the original cover and I actually preferred the non-half-naked-dude cover. :)

Kim


message 2: by Julianna (new)

Julianna Keyes Kim wrote: "I think people want dual POV because they can't get it in real life. You never really and truly know what the other person in your life is thinking or feeling. Being able to have it in a fictional ..."

The original "Undecided" cover is my favourite, too, but it really started to feel like 90% of the reviews were mentioning the cover being off-putting, so I decided to try something new. I'm still learning, after all! :)

Thanks for the feedback re: dual POV - I've never thought of it as being comforting, but I can see your point!


message 3: by Jeannine (new)

Jeannine Allison I never thought about the challenge of a single POV like that, but it definitely makes sense! I like dual POV because I enjoy being in both of the characters head, and in some stories I think it's necessary for both perspectives--it just depends on the story. I would never not read a story because there was only one POV, some of my favorites only have the one--Undecided included! ;) I just love the males so much in those stories that I'd enjoy more of them. I think both can be challenging depending on the author and the novel.

And if you want only one comma and no periods, go for it!! ;D One of my favorite things about artistic ventures is that want is an acceptable part of it, IMO. I know many don't feel that way but I stressed about my decisions for way too long when I was younger before I decided that my wants were important. I respect both ways, but I personally don't think there is anything wrong with doing something just because you want to :)

P.S. I liked both covers, but I'm glad you changed only because I think love triangles scare a lot of readers and the new cover won't cloud their judgment! :)

xoxo


message 4: by Julianna (new)

Julianna Keyes Jeannine wrote: "I never thought about the challenge of a single POV like that, but it definitely makes sense! I like dual POV because I enjoy being in both of the characters head, and in some stories I think it's ..."

I totally agree with you about the importance of doing what you "want" in artistic ventures. I think it shows if you're doing something you feel obligated to do or something you feel an audience wants you to do instead of something that feels true to you. That said, I absolutely need to have a reason for my "want," even if it takes some digging to find it. :)

ps: I have not had anymore "love triangle" complaints since changing the cover. ;)


message 5: by Jeannine (new)

Jeannine Allison Julianna wrote: "I absolutely need to have a reason for my "want," even if it takes some digging to find it. :)"

^^That makes total sense :)

[I'm gonna get real psychological here lol] But I'm sure underneath most wants we can find the "need," I'm just super lazy ;)


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