I spent most of yesterday trying not to overheat and working on “After Making Landfall”. I did a couple of posts for publishign later in the week.
(3) The 53rd Try Was the Charm - by Marcia Yudkin persistence.
(3) There Are More than Five POVs - by Lincoln Michel explains why I have been having trouble with POV as an idea because I have been focusing on who has the information and how it is conveyed. Five seems like my experience.
Look, I said this was going to be a pedantic and low-stakes post. But for fun I’m going to offer a different taxonomy of POV based more on storytelling than grammar. From a narrative perspective, I think there are three main questions as far as POV goes. 1) Information, aka what can the narrator know and convey to the reader. 2) Filtration, aka whose consciousness(es) is information filtered through. 3) Modulation, aka how is the narrator shaping information for the assumed listener.
(3) The Writing Advice I’ll Never Give You - by Kristen Weber: Just read it.
(3) Lit Theory 101 | Voice, Consciousness & Distance
Today we’re tackling the topic of VOICE, otherwise known as perhaps the single most abused word in the entire craft vocabulary (am I dramatic? No not me). People say voice to mean tone, style, sensibility, character interiority, the way the prose sounds, that special je ne sais pas quoi a certain author might possess. The idea of voice is used to praise work and also to dismiss it and seldom does it seem to mean the same thing twice.
And the reason this matters — the reason we’re dedicating pretty much the entire second unit of this series to voice — is that almost every failure in writing is a failure of voice.
This ties into the POV essay above.
Alan Palmer1, in Fictional Minds sums it up as follows:
When you read a discourse and ask “Who speaks?” or “Who narrates?,” you are concerned with narration. When you ask “Who sees?” or “Who thinks?” then you are concerned with focalization. Sometimes an agent sees and speaks at the same time, and sometimes the agent who sees is different from the agent who speaks.
A first-person narrator recounting her childhood is speaking as her adult self, but the narrative might be focalized through the child she was — seeing a parent’s argument with the limited understanding of a six-year-old, even as the adult voice arranges those impressions into sentences.
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If I wanted to pick one primary takeaway from this, it’d be this: please remember focalization can shift! Virginia Woolf in Mrs Dalloway slides between Clarissa and Septimus and Peter Walsh within a single paragraph… the third-person narrator remaining stable while the focalizer flickers. These moments of transition are where the prose does its strangest, most beautiful work. Two consciousnesses brushing against each other through the same syntax.
Focalization is one of the few narrative tools that can carry a metaphysical claim. Liviu Lutas10, for examples, writes about disembodied focalization — that is, narratives focalized through a brain in a jar, a forest, a mountain, a house — what he’s exploring is the idea of whether vision can detach from a human body.
All the readers of Dorn have interpretations that come from their histories, their particular intellects, and desires, and yearnings they might not be aware of. That’s the beauty of fiction; it is a continually mutating protoplasm in the minds of readers. This colorless, almost invisible ever transforming blob of reactions is the party. It is not a machine. It is not good or evil, bad or boring—it is a cry in the dark, a hope looking for a harbor, something that pretends to make sense but, in actuality, is much deeper than that.
And let’s not forget the original definition of the term, the word novel; it means that you’re about to encounter something original, different, unique. And so, when the critic in your newspaper, your classroom, when the editor in your mind, or of your book, tells you that your novel would make a poor coffee percolator (or potboiler) you tell them, thank you, because the novel you created (and that is recreated by each and every one of your readers) is an ever-transforming document that grants the power to evolve in the minds of the many. From Conan the Barbarian to Othello the written word has the potential for transformation no one can predict.
6/28-29 submissions
Kestrel: A Journal of Literature and Art, Mudroom, The /tƐmz/ Review got “After Making Landfall”.
Going out soon. Still no phone, and the heat advisory continues.
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