A wise person once observed that advice books on writing can be legitimately compared to tools sold to fossickers during the gold rush days of the 1800’s. History shows the only individuals who reliably prospered during such manic periods of ‘gold fever’ (“There’s bound to be some in them thar hills!”) were the business–minded types who set up shop supplying the requisite tools of trade – pans, picks, spades, gloves etc – to the ever hopeful prospectors; ninety-five percent of who would never see so much as an atom of the shiny stuff.
And so it can be said with craft books when an everyday person with an interest in writing buys one offering to make them a more successful writer if only the advice is followed. When success and riches don’t follow in the promised quantities and the hard realities of competing in a sodden, hyper-saturated market begin to bite, where, if any, does the fault lie?
Writing advice books, unlike say cookbooks, should be bought with a significantly lowered expectation that if the recipe is followed to the letter for, to take as an example, Pommes de Terre Duchesse (French potato meringues), the dish will emerge from the oven looking exactly as it appears in the celebrity chef endorsed, glossy how-to manual.
By the same token, success due in part to reading writing advice books cannot be ruled out. John Grisham, James Patterson, Patricia Cornwall, Stephen King and any other flaming star in the writing world have no doubt, at some point in their lives read a craft book which in some way may have strengthened their style and ability.
Writing advice books will always be written and bought. Accepting this reality, discussion of them therefore need focus on sorting the precious gems and vein deposits from the ever flowing river silt. Which brings us to FIVE EDITORS TACKLE THE TWELVE FATAL FLAWS OF FICTION. As writing advice books go, this one comes out above average without ever really threatening to rise to the stone cold classic mantle.
Five female writers, all published authors and all connected to the online website LIVE WRITE THRIVE don the shiny sheriff’s badge of Editor and let rip with enough scholarly advice to sink a battleship. Let’s acknowledge straight up when talk turns to ‘rules of writing’ some readers will instinctively want to be rule breakers. Better then to think of ‘guidelines’ of which there are in spades in this text. The most skilled creators of these types of books know that readers don’t just come looking for information and motivation, they want understanding as well.
So what does the amateur author looking to better themselves get for their money with this manual? Seems that everyone’s mother was right after all. The mantra of this book can be summed up in the age old advice about balance in all things, where balance means not too much and not too little. Balance between thought, action and emotion. Balance between narrative and dialogue. Balance between slowing down and cutting to the chase. Balance between adding vivid detail and deleting detail that is irrelevant.
To their credit, the authors all acknowledge that a great many tips are more easily given then followed. This is welcome understanding for the reader. In another section the authors again eat humble pie and admit that ‘theory’ comes with its own in-built limitations and sometimes editorial advice can go askew.
Apart from the twelve chapters devoted to making it clear what the classic flaws of fiction are perceived to be, the text also comes with before and after passages whereby the reader can bear witness firsthand to the transformational effect of the advice if followed. The before passages are generally both transparently and exaggeratedly ‘bad’ so the difference when they magically transform into ‘good’ writing after the application of the proffered advice is all the more noticeable. (“Granted, the before passage possibly seems extreme.” P117) As if to confirm this, one of the editors, Robin Patchen, confesses the ‘before’ passage took her five minutes to write while the ‘after’ passage took closer to an hour. Conclusion? It would appear bad writing flows so much more readily and comes that much more naturally to us all.
The authors all quote extensively from their own published novels (“Let’s take a look at this scene from my novel _______________.”) This approach had to have saved a lot of time in chasing down copyright permissions to use other writer’s works, however there’s no denying this practice also carries with it the unfortunate air of self-promotion.
Included as well are exercises where the reader is asked to put into practice the advice given and transform a passage of text themselves.
The book naturally warns of the perils of purple prose and keeping to its ‘all things in moderation’ edict includes seemingly contradictory chapters on “Overwriting” and “Avoiding the Vague Swamp”, “Too Much Backstory” and “Too Little Backstory” as well as the obligatory chapter (Fatal Flaw # 6) on Showing Not Telling. Perhaps to avoid the complete slide into cliché the book also includes a chapter entitled “When it’s Better To tell Than Show”.
The towering quote of the text for me was from editor Robin Patchen, speaking on the importance of cadence in writing - “Readers long for beauty in words the way tourists seek out beauty in landscape and architecture. Perhaps they fly to Paris for the wine and cheese, but they’ll admire the Notre Dame on the way to dinner and the trip will be richer for it.” (p248)
Practical advice is positively swirling amongst these pages and while it does pack some serious fire power in this regard I couldn’t help but think that the large concrete slabs of, what at a certain point, begins to feel like unrelenting advice and correction, could perhaps have been made to feel a little more aerated with the addition of something of the order of a sprinkling, let’s say of writerly cartoons for example (You know the type where one person is saying to another less then serious stuff like –“My best fiction writing is my daily to-do list.”). If you’re looking to remain on the writing advice treadmill but want a little more entertainment along the way I recommend two other texts- HOW TO WRITE BADLY WELL by Joel Stickly and BACK TO CREATIVE WRTING SCHOOL by Bridget Whelan.