There were two times a year that I looked forward to as a kid when it came to reading. The beginning of the school year when we got the Scholastic order form was the first. My parents were the most generous people on the planet because I’d come home with almost every book checked. They always got them for me. They’d come in a tall stack (20 to 30 books), and for the next couple weeks I was consumed. Books are always an adventure (mine can’t help but reflect that).
The second was Christmas. When my parents realized that I was ready for adult-level books by sixth-grade, they began to give me their favorite books, some from the 40’s, some contemporary, many before I’d read them :).
They also joined book clubs left and right (so did I back when money was available). Today, my sisters have boxes of books they ship from house to house (the worst thing about living 3000 miles away).
Here we are a Christmas and I’d be remiss not to remind you of the amazing possibilities that Prevail Press offers.
Books that are a True Gift!
Got kids? For the grade schoolers, may I suggest Always Look for the Magicby Bonnie Manning Anderson, and Do Angels Still Fall? by Robert Alexander Swanson (me; and parents, read with your kids!).
Who says writers aren’t artists? Well, no one, I hope. But in case you have doubts, and you’re in the Orlando area, several Prevail Press authors are participating in Metro Life’s 2nd Annual Art Show THIS SATURDAY from 4-9!
Metro Life Church is in beautiful Casselberry, FL, at the juncture of Red Bug Lake Road and Winter Park Drive (if you know where Buffalo Wild Wings is in Casselberry, you’re almost there).
Be there or be a Philistine
Metro Life is an amazing church that is all about growing the individual in all aspects of development, from spiritual, emotional, physical (if you like basketball), and the creative arts.
Metro has opened their doors to artists of all kinds, from fabulous painters, sculptors, photographers, folk artists, fine artists, and authors. This year, performing artists have a gallery of their own.
And of course, there will be Author’s Row, a book signing with local authors. Our Prevail Press heroes will be:
Bonnie Anderson (ask her about her new book that will be coming out soon).
Bill Hufford (brand new book on culture change).
Tom and Debi Walter (fresh from the airport. Or not so fresh, you tell us).
Aron Osborne (ask him about his podcasts related to his book).
Robert Alexander Swanson (that’s me, with my newest book about creativity… at an art show, don’t you love the synchronicity?)
There will be cheese, punch, cookies, and ART!
If you’re in Orlando, come join us, you’ll be glad you did.
I had the privilege of joining Mike Gilland on the radio to promote both Metro Life’s 2nd Annual Art Show and my book Creativity Wears Boots.
Mike’s show, Afternoons with Mike, is on the Shepard Radio at 1270 AM on the radio dial andhttps://www.theshepherdradio.com/ on the web. He was kind enough to invite me on and if you missed it, you can hear it here, right now!
Mike is the ultimate professional and I probably let my mind get ahead of my mouth several times, so any incoherence is on me, not Mike. Enjoy and see you at the Art Show this Saturday, Dec. 7th between 4 and 9 PM. It’s an open house, you don’t have to stay through it all, but you just might want to with the performing arts on display in the Alive Gallery!
In first-person narrative, your character tells the story. In third-person narrative, an unidentified narrator tells the story.
First or third-person, you need to know your narrator to
make sure it’s a unified, consistent voice.
That’s a little easier with first-person because you’re
developing that character for us. In all but the unreliable narrator*, your third-person
character is whole at the start of the story, just unseen.
Hallmarks of the invisible narrator include:
Imagine if bruises weren’t invisible.
Trustworthiness.
Competence.
Consistent vocabulary, reading level, rhythm, narrative
distance, and word-choice.
Trustworthiness is achieved by accurately telling the story,
placing reveals in the proper order (when the reader needs and not after the fact),
and not spieling off into irrelevant prose. The trustworthy narrator is concise
and complete, but not pedantic or over-explaining. This is also true for the first-person
narrator.
The competent narrator understands the subject matter, using
appropriate language correctly. In a sci-fi novel, the narrator has to
competently handle the concepts and technology of the story. They psychological
thriller must have an insightful narrator who can relate complex concepts with
an approachable style, but clear understanding of it. For the first-person
narrator, competency may begin low and build to competency, which is an effective
storytelling device and sometimes may tell you if your narrator should be first-
or third-person.
Trust and competence are like butlers; they are noticeable only
when a mistake is made. (There’s a story about a director struggling with a
supporting character, a butler, who was finding every means to take the
spotlight. The director finally asked him, “John, are you playing a good butler?”
“Why, I’m playing the best butler!” “Excellent. Great butlers are invisible.
Make it so.”)
Use of language is often visible in a tingling kind of way.
You never want your prose to pull the reader out of the story, yet you do want
the occasional thrill at the back of the reader’s mind. This is done with the occasional,
consistent metaphor. “His heart pounded a paradiddle on the snare drum of his
chest.” Paradiddle is a musical term,
suggesting the narrator should stick with artistic metaphors. She should NOT
throw in nautical metaphors unless the story is suddenly in an oceanic setting.
That doesn’t mean metaphors must always be musical. No character is a single
thing, however, consider that few people are several major things. So your
narrator may have other, minor, metaphors and similes, but it would be wise to
make most of the metaphors artistic in this case.
Hemmingway kept his word choice to one or two syllables. Ted
Geisel was challenged to write a book with only single syllable words, and Dr.
Seuss was born. Consider the texture of your words. Crunchy, spikey, edged
words should be used as seasoning… not too much; not too little. Sticking to a
consistent rhythm makes deviations of the rhythm more powerful. Long sentences
and large paragraphs can begin to shorten to increase pace and shave to a
punch!
Narrative distance refers to how close to the characters and
actions the narrator is. Can the narrator hear the character’s thoughts? If so,
relating those thoughts need to be consistent. Is the narrator warm or cold?
Warm means close; cold means distant, that is, the descriptions are clinical,
not insightful.
A couple caveats:
You can use different narrators based on the chapter’s
major character as long as it’s the same narrator each time for each character
(don’t use more than a couple narrative voices). In shows and movies, certain
characters have musical themes that play when they are the focus. Same idea
here.
Unreliable narrators first appear to be
trustworthy and competent before showing their true colors as a liar or
incomplete narrator who withholds vital information. With an unreliable narrator,
it can be the only narrator (except in rare cases). Writing a good unreliable narrator
is difficult to pull off.
One of your first editing jobs is to evaluate
the consistency of your narrator. Get this right and your story will probably
fly.
Think about your favorite stories and examine
the narrator. A great narrator will make you fall into the story despite your intent
to analyze. Now go find your narrator.
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