Don’t Re-Invent the World by Ryan Miller
Soooo, I've been a fan of today's guest blogger for a long, long time. Ryan Miller is a good friend from college that I lost touch with until recently. We reconnected over our love for children's literature. Since then, he's become one of the Muses' biggest fans.Currently, he's the executive editor at the San Luis Obispo NEW TIMES and the Santa Maria SUN.
Seriously, guys, Ryan is one of the funniest people I've ever met (c'mon just look at that portrait) and I can't imagine a better man to step up to be Mr. Friday for a week. So put your hands together for Ryan Miller...
Seriously, guys, Ryan is one of the funniest people I've ever met (c'mon just look at that portrait) and I can't imagine a better man to step up to be Mr. Friday for a week. So put your hands together for Ryan Miller...
Thank you.
Yes, hello. This is Ryan Miller. You probably remember me from some of my
comments here at the YA Muses blog, like “I totally agree, Bret.” Or maybe, “I
convinced my city librarian to get several copies of Under the Never Sky.”
Yes, I’m that Ryan Miller.
Of course,
considering such bon mots as those,
it will come as no surprise to you to learn that I’m a professional writer. A
journalist, actually. That means I write about stuff that really happens.
Sounds
great, huh? Yeah, it is—except when I try to write about the other stuff. You
know, the stuff that doesn’t really
happen. Fiction, it’s called.
Journalism
is easy, see? You just talk to people and write down what they say. Maybe you
throw in a description of what they look like or what they’re wearing. Or you
can observe an event and just report what happened.
You’re
essentially transcribing life, and what could be easier than that? It’s all
right in front of you, like pennies to be plucked from the sidewalk. Just scoop
up that visual detail and drop it in your pocket to be used later.
The sound
of the source’s laugh? Grab it. The color of his eyes? Take that, too. The
smell of the dingy parking garage where you’re meeting? OK, Woodward, jot it
down. Put it all in your article and sell some papers!
Fiction,
however, has no ties to reality. It’s all made up in your head. To write
something fantastical, you have to sit in front of your computer and think as
hard as you can think, sometimes building entire worlds from the ground up. You
have to decide which way gravity goes and probably create colors that have
never been seen before, like grallow or purnk.
Or so I
used to think.
I’ve tried
for years to write a story, and it’s a good one. It’s got ghosts and giant
animals fighting and a hero who can’t see—but I get paralyzed by the sheer
scope of what I’m trying to do. I had a sneaking suspicion that it was easier
than I was making it. Not much
easier, but a bit. And then this Bret guy goes and talks about Bruce Coville
and slipping details sideways into your stories, and I would have smacked
myself in the forehead if I weren’t worried that such a move would take out the
light bulb going on up there.
Here’s the
thing: I already do that. The detail
slipping, that is.
There’s a
mantra we journalists use (we narrative
journalists anyway), and it goes like this: “Show, don’t tell.” What does that
mean? Well, instead of saying, “the guy was angry”—which, admittedly, can be a
judgment call—we can write, “when the red creeping up his shaking face finally
reached his cheekbones, he flipped the table over with a roar.”
OK. Maybe
that wouldn’t be much of a judgment call to label that anger, but still—which
was more fun to read? More descriptive? More informative?
So suddenly
I’m looking at how I write every day about the stuff I see, and I’m looking at
my much less successful attempts to write about stuff I’m just pulling out of
my head—because, hey, all journalists have a novel in them somewhere—and I’m
realizing I’VE BEEN DOING IT WRONG.
The fiction
part, I mean.
Because if
I can slip something sideways into one of my news stories, and—if Bret can be
believed—I can also slip something sideways into a bit of fiction, the two
genres aren’t that far removed from one another.
As I
realize these things, more light bulbs spark to life. The air above my head
resembles a landing strip, and I hope no 747s are in a holding pattern anywhere
nearby.
So that
weird-looking dog I saw lapping up water from the gutter on my way to work? It
can find a home in the desert city I’ve been trying to populate for years. So can
that woman hurrying to catch the bus. And the smell of the gyro place a few
blocks down. I just have to tweak a few details.
Because
that’s what it’s all about, right?
I mean, JRR
Tolkien didn’t need to create a place for his hobbits to spend time when they
weren’t hiking to Mordor and mucking about with rings because houses already exist. He’d seen them. A
lot of them, probably. He simply made the doors round instead of rectangular,
sort of shoved them underground a bit, and—voila!—he’s a genius. (But he might
not be a good example, since he kinda did create a couple of races, an entire
creation mythology, and several languages
for his stories. Show off.)
JK Rowling
didn’t invent wizards, she just took what she already knew about the
“fictional” people group and put her own spin on them. MT Anderson didn’t make
up whales or stilts, but he did couple them together. HP Lovecraft … nah, I’ve
got nothing. I was just trying to keep the “authors who go by their initials”
thing going. Also, Cthulu creeps me out.
My point is
that I’ve been trying to figure out a way to chip this block of stone I have
into something I can put under my cart to make it roll, all while leaning
against this sleek chariot I use every day. Get it? I don’t have to invent the
wheel. Neither do you. We can just, you know, make it glow at night, whistle
when it spins, and leave marks in the road that resemble eels on land. Or
something.
Ooh, land
eels. I’ll have to remember that one.
Here’s another
way to look at it. Even Dr. Frankenstein didn’t just try to conjure his
creature out of thin air. The story I want to bring to life is like a body. And
there’s already a skeleton waiting for me. There’s even a little muscle on it.
Some tendons. Maybe a bit of cartilage. All I have to do is flesh it out by
choosing skin tone, eye color, muscle tone, general build, hairstyle. The fun
stuff. The details. At the end of the day, I’ll have a unique creation that I
didn’t have to make from scratch—and thank goodness, huh? Because who knows
where to find a quality femur these days?
Ryan Miller is a journalist and editor living on California's Central Coast with his wife, two daughters, and a baby on the way. His freelance nonfiction work has been published in Longshot (formerly 48 Hour Magazine, in which his work also appeared), Mothering, San Louie, and California Northern. His fiction work hasn't been published anywhere. He collects thimbles, first-edition YA novels, loteria decks, dragons, teas, and collections.
7 comments
You make a very import point that can be missed if one drives by too fast. There are so many unique ways to "do" the known. You mentioned a few of the obvious.
With The Last Air Bender series, people could "bend" the elements to their will. Though it was not called "magic" it was certainly very magical.
In my own WiP, NEVERLOVE, there's nothing really new under the sun. I'm just fleshing out my story, with its familiar tropes, with my own unique perspective.
So most excellent post, Ryan. Most excellent in deed.
Love this, Ryan! And let it be noted that I would read a novel you wrote in a heartbeat. Especially if it features land eels.
I agree with Amy above. (See, that's MY genius comment, mes bon mots....)
Yes to all of the above! I come from a journalism background, too, Ryan, (though, ahem, not as successful a background as yours) and totally agree that the journalistic eye for detail and good description is invaluable in creating a believable fictional world.
Thanks for wrapping up our guest blog week with such an excellent post! As Angela says, "most excellent indeed."
Great point! Use the world around you. As a journalist you've got a bigger world than some of us. Get right on the land eels story. I want to read that one!
But really, using what you've got is a great idea. It's just a matter of looking at it with a different set of eyes.
And Brett's right-you are funny. Must have been a blast in college!
Great post!
Heather
Right on. Great post! But you have to admit, round doors and hobbit holes are pretty revolutionary. :)
@Angela: I hadn't thought about bending as an example. Good one!
@Amy: I'll be sure to keep the eels away from any running mice I see.
@Beth: We'll both be in Bartlett's someday, I'm sure.
@Katherine: Thank you! I was honored to see my words on this site!
@BOOKS: You should have heard Bret. I still laugh out loud at stuff I remember him saying.
@Michelle: If I win the lottery, I'm getting a hobbit house, so yeah. I agree.
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