446. Writing Fiction

I’ve sometimes tried to write fiction. I’ve liked some of what I’ve written, and even sent some of it to a few publishers (with no success). And yet I only recently learned, in a third grade class, that there are some conventions to follow in writing fiction. I learned that even though you may have mental pictures of what your characters look like and where your story takes place, you’ve got to give those pictures to your readers.
My stories have tended to let the reader know what the characters were thinking, what words were said, and what actions and events took place, but my words have rarely painted pictures.
I thought that writers like Thomas Hardy only described their settings in such detail as a matter of personal style. My high school English teacher told us that Hardy’s description of the heath in The Return of the Native made the heath almost seem like a main character in the novel, and I could see what he meant. But I didn’t think I had to apply any bit of Hardy’s style to my own writing. The first chapter of The Return of the Native was not fun to read; in fact, it made some of us want to go get the Cliff Notes, rather than actually read the whole book. Almost nothing happened in the first chapter. It was torture.
While that chapter of Hardy’s still seems extreme to me, the third grade lesson I observed (and, ironically, helped teach) got me thinking about fiction. When children first start writing fiction, they often start the way I have – they tell the reader what’s fun to tell. For many children, action is what’s fun to tell about. If the reader has no idea who the characters are, or where the action is happening, too bad. It’s no fun telling about that stuff.
The children I taught often wanted to write fiction, but I usually told them that I wanted their stories to be true. My reason was that much of the fiction children wrote in my class was not as good as their autobiographical writing. They gave more details when they wrote about what had actually happened to them, and what they had done. Attending to detail is hard work, and it’s a little easier for some children to find details in their memories than in their imaginations. Their fiction tended to list actions, and connect the actions with the word “then.” At first, I tried to steer them away from that tendency, and later, after I’d learned a little more about teaching, I tried to get them to steer each other away from it. It didn’t occur to me until that third grade lesson I observed that I’ve been trying to teach children how to do something I don’t do as well as I could.
I’ll try to write better fiction now, and I’ll try to help children do so, too. It’s too bad no one succeeded in teaching me about the importance of describing the settings of stories, or the characters. But that kind of focus makes for better writing and better teaching.

Similar Posts

  • 596. Earth

    There are nine planets in our solar system, and we all had the good fortune to be born on what is probably the only one that can sustain human life. There may be planets in other solar systems that can do it even better, but I think earth is pretty good at it. And I…

  • 72. Exuberance

    I’ve been waiting for the right moment to write about coping with children’s exuberance. I wanted to pick a moment when I was feeling exuberant, and could think about how it might be difficult for other people to deal with me. But as most writers know, ecstatic moments don’t make you feel like sitting around…

  • 454. When to Complain

    My article about grumpiness begins to tell a tale that will probably come out in bits and pieces. Nowadays, when I feel like complaining about something, I try to spend time and energy thinking about whether complaining would be an appropriate thing to do, and if so, how to do it. I don’t rule out…

  • 286. When Friends Argue

    I’ve come to know that when children who are good friends argue, they usually remain good friends. But they often don’t know that. One child may angrily and earnestly say, “I’m never playing with you again.” Another may think the world has come to an end; without that particular friendship, nothing will ever be right…