Earlier this month, Jean Henry Mead wrote about changes in the publishing industry and the different genres in which she wrote. I found myself agreeing with every point, especially that we should be free to shift genres if we felt like it. My earliest ‘publications’ were parodies, written as school
exercises and put into the school magazine by a teacher, so I suppose from the
start I was something of an experimenter when it came to style or genre. In other
words, I wrote whatever the style demanded. I still love
parody and I think we learn lots from trying to write like others – not all the
time, of course, but as occasional writing exercises.
As a teenager, I wrote poetry – truly awful stuff about
love, broken hearts, lust and all that time-wasting but so painfully-felt
angst. But my first real genre, when I began to realise that writing was what I
wanted to do, was drama. I wrote stage plays for adults and children. My first
real taste of ‘being a writer’, though, was when the BBC accepted one of my
radio plays. They broadcast several more, mostly serious, dramatic stuff, but
some comedy too and finally, skits and songs for revues.
Those days, I was praised for my dialogue so it was a
surprise when I started to write novels to find that the characters in them sometimes
sounded less natural and realistic than those in my plays. I think writing long
prose works sets up different rhythms in your mind as you write and they get carried
into the dialogue, so you have to read it aloud and rewrite it to get the
proper rhythmic balance.
I’m talking about different forms rather than different
genres, but I think it’s relevant, to show that most of us start out just
writing, rather than writing ‘crime’ or ‘romance’ or whatever. When we do fall
into a particular genre – in my case, crime – that becomes what we’re expected
to produce. But if readers are allowed to have short attention spans, so are
we. By that I mean that the prospect of churning out book after book, each
featuring the same characters in more or less the same places, is challenging
in one way but claustrophobic in another. Exploring fresh ground, shifting into
different centuries, past and yet to come, bending realities and multiplying
dimensions, they’re all ways of releasing and refreshing your writing.
With the need to engage in energetic marketing nowadays, I
realise that publishing novels totally
different from one another in terms of genre, might be confusing for readers. Those who read The Darkness, a
police procedural as dark as its title which questions ideas of bad and good,
will be very surprised if they think ‘I enjoyed that, so I’ll try The Sparrow Conundrum’, only to find
it’s a satirical spoof of the crime/spy genres whose sole aim is to make them
laugh. So they say ‘OK, I’ll give this guy one last try’ and they read The Figurehead and find they’re in the
company of shipbuilding people in Aberdeen in 1840 and that a novel that starts
with a corpse on a beach ends up with the mystery being solved but with a
strong romance developing at the same time.
Oh, and if they then decide to read their kids a bedtime
story, choose one about a miserable fairy called Stanley who lives under a
dripping tap in a bedroom, then find out it’s by the same bloke who wrote the
others, they may wonder which asylum I finished up in. More importantly, they
probably won’t trust me to satisfy their writing needs because I ‘lack
consistency’.
The point is that, for me, there’s no difference writing any
of these books or, for that matter, the dialogue between Joseph and Mary when
she tells him she’s been visited by an angel and she’s pregnant. If the
subject’s interesting, it absorbs me. The characters dictate the sort of things
that happen; they have their own voices, their own ambitions and flaws. So
whether they’re in Victorian Scotland, a contemporary police station, a space
colony or sitting under a dripping tap; whether they’re murderers, lovers, saints,
fairies or Klingons, they force their way into your head and you have to deal
with them on their terms.
Writing is like acting – if you want the audience to suspend
their disbelief, you have to do the same, you have to commit to the reality of
the play you’re performing, the story you’re writing. I feel as intensely in
the scene when I’m describing the antics of Stanley as when I’m watching John Grant carve
his figurehead or my detective work his way through external clues and internal
devils. It makes life very exciting.
1 comment:
I agree, Bill. We both write mysteries, juvenile fiction, historical novels and nonfiction. I'm sure it's confusing to some of our readers. That's probably why I received a nasty review for one of my mystery novels from a reader who complained that she enjoys historical novels, not mysteries, although the cover clearly states that the book is a mystery/suspense novel. Go figure.
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