Shreya Gandharkar
asked
Maggie Stiefvater:
What do you think makes an author good? Or rather a story good?
Maggie Stiefvater
Twenty years ago I would have had a different answer to this question, and probably in another twenty I'll have a still different one.
But for now, having read hundreds of authors and thousands of books, I find that what makes a book good to me is originality and specificity. I want to hear a story told in a way I haven't before, or be taken to a place I haven't seen before, or shown a corner of a culture that I haven't ever noticed. I want to see characters or places or situations drawn with such specificity and accuracy, even when turned into metaphor, that I can tell the author is working from real life and real truth, not making a copy of other things they have read or seen.
I want to read a thing I haven't read before, and as most big readers will know, that gets harder and harder the more you consume.
It means every year I become both a more adventurous reader and a more choosy one, paddling off into further genres to fish for books I might not have tried years before. It also means I am far more merciless at throwing them back.
Does that make an author or story good? It makes it good for me. For now. And as a writer, I firmly believe you are what you eat, or rather, you are what you read, and so I like to think my adventures serve to keep my own stories fresh, too.
But for now, having read hundreds of authors and thousands of books, I find that what makes a book good to me is originality and specificity. I want to hear a story told in a way I haven't before, or be taken to a place I haven't seen before, or shown a corner of a culture that I haven't ever noticed. I want to see characters or places or situations drawn with such specificity and accuracy, even when turned into metaphor, that I can tell the author is working from real life and real truth, not making a copy of other things they have read or seen.
I want to read a thing I haven't read before, and as most big readers will know, that gets harder and harder the more you consume.
It means every year I become both a more adventurous reader and a more choosy one, paddling off into further genres to fish for books I might not have tried years before. It also means I am far more merciless at throwing them back.
Does that make an author or story good? It makes it good for me. For now. And as a writer, I firmly believe you are what you eat, or rather, you are what you read, and so I like to think my adventures serve to keep my own stories fresh, too.
More Answered Questions
Angelica Bailey
asked
Maggie Stiefvater:
Hi, Maggie. I'm from the same state as one and a women that I meet at the library said that you may know about local writing groups for people that want to become an author. Can you help me with find a writing group that you many sponsor or something in the Shenandoah Valley? It would mean a lot if you could help me.
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Nov 19, 2020 05:54PM · flag
Nov 20, 2020 05:50AM · flag