Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Creativity and Predictability

Think left and think right
      and think low and think high.
Oh the things you can think up
      if you only try.
---------Theodore Geisel (aka Dr. Seuss)

      So, should we give Dr. Seuss the credit for inventing the phrase, "Think outside the box"?
     
     When a novelist is busy "thinking outside the box," is is always a novelty (pun just happened, and I love it!)?
    
     I fear that the pursuit of novelty may result in short shrift for plotting or characters.
That said, when Tolkien wrote that wonderful tale of Middle Earth, it was indeed filled with novelties...
     ....Or, was it?
    
     Ogres and dwarves, dragons and magicians, bogeymen and giants had all been in stories since time immemorial (hey, I was born in Memorial... Hospital, that is!)...granted, hobbits are a "new" kind of little people, but folklore is filled with humanoids of all stripes and sizes.

     What's so unique about the Hobbit and Trilogy? Or, is there really anything unique? Is this just another "grail quest," where saintly do-gooders must fulfill a mission to save themselves or their kingdom or their liege-lord?
     Is Frodo in the middle of a not-so-thinly veiled allegory? (Tolkien vigorously sez, NO!)

     Or, is The Hobbit/LOTR simply a smashingly good story that takes a familiar genre to new hgts of detail and delight? And, is the "novelty" of the story just the fact that Tolkien wove a wondrously complex tapestry of characters who grew as they stumbled from one trouble into the next?

     Think about this--do we really like novelty in a protagonist, or do we love their familiar quirks, their verbal tics, their predictable outbursts of rage or humor or irony? As I reread favorites, or watch the one or two TV programs that "behave like novels," I find myself enjoying not the novelty but the familiar: the wise-cracking as two best buddies insult each other (think "Car Tawk"), or the female's preoccupation with fine dining or shoes; the recurring jokes and peculiar postures that tell you--yes, this character is real, is predictable (to just the right degree) but is also flexible and sometimes surprising.

     Got any books/stories/programs/movies that leap to mind as you read this?


Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Polysyllables...2/6/13

Poor Faulkner. Does he really think big emotions some from big words? He thinks I don't know ten-dollar words. I know them all right. But there are older and simpler and better words, and those are the ones I use.

-----Ernest Hemingway, having been informed that William Faulkner "had no courage" and "had never been known to use a word that might send the reader to the dictionary."

=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

     Personally, I love big words. When we started vigorous vocab studies in jr. high, I thought that was the cat's meow! However, as a physician, I learned to keep my words simple, direct, and colorful...and was told by patients more than once that I was the only doc that ever talked to them so's they could understand!

     More education, sadly, often teases the "erudite one" away from common sense and the ability to communicate with the public. Grandiloquency rarely augments clarity, and prolixity leads to perplexity, perturbation, and pother.

Sometimes, a big word is the only bullet that'll hit the bull's-eye.
Oft-times, not.

Do you think it is ever okay to send a reader to the dictionary? (I try not to, and consider it a failure of communication on my behalf if I cannot be understood by the reader on the first pass.)

Monday, February 4, 2013

2/4/13: Walking and looking for...what?


The GREATEST SECRET of life...we all find exactly what we're looking for...ultimately, whether our lives are good or bad, ugly or beautiful.
      --The Walk. Richard Paul Evans.

What am I looking for? Goodness and beauty and, ultimately, the Source of all goodness. Is writing a valid avenue for that search? I sure hope so. There are days when I wonder if I oughta be investing my energies in another arena...but, there are times when someone says, "David, I was just reading one of your daily devotions, and it really moved me. Thank you." That's when I remind myself that, per my theology, there is a definite adversary out there who wants to oppose anything and everything good.

How to tell when it's satanic opposition? If what we're pursuing would be something undilutedly good for self or others, then it's like spiritual forces that are working to make the way dark, the road steep, and the headwind to be numbing.

That's when that old-fashioned perseverance comes into play--gotta keep on going, walking one footstep at a time, one after the other. Whew. Hang in there gang!

If you haven't read the author cited above, I do recommend him. Some might say he's a bit schmaltzy, but I don't think he's just sugar and bubblegum--there's a core of truthful seeking and seeking of truth, and a heart that wants to do right by people and that is willing to admit that not all the answers are simple to find or enact. Refreshing.

Any books or an author that has led you to walk further down the road? Care to share?

Saturday, February 2, 2013

2/2/13--Hacking Away.

Higher emotions are what separate us from the lower orders of life. Higher emotions...and table manners.
        --Deanna Troi, Star Trek Next Generation Commander.



What separates a hack from a higher order writer? I have a lot of possible answers...

--not belching at the table (sorry--my Grampa Thomas always threatened to get the Emily Post ETIQUETTE book out of the bookcase but I never saw it happen!)

--clarity

--good grammar

--characters that are believable, with quirks that make them interesting and dialogue that sparkles

--the ability to create a suspension of belief for the reader...that is, my alternative to reality is so good that the reader jumps on in with both feet and stops listening to that whining little voice that says, "It's only make-believe."

--the simplest and best answer: does the writing move the reader, eliciting empathy or action or laughter or tears or refreshed spirit or firmed-up resolve?

 I just read the third book of Richard Paul Evans' WALK series...and the author does a great job of delivering his message with simplicity, amidst a plot with enough twists and turns to hold my interest. Am also rereading THE HOBBIT--wow, talk about eliciting empathy, with a plot that lures me onward in a phantasy-land that is oh-so-believable. Tolkien, a definite hero, and the author of 4 of the 10 books I'd pack for my life-long exile on a desert isle! (I know, you'd rather be on the dessert aisle!)

Silly puns (is that a redundancy?) aside...read anything lately that moved you?

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Magic

Real satisfaction came when inspiration and effort magically took flight.
Maryanne O'Hara--Cascade.


Think back to the last time you took that magical flight Ms. O'Hara describes...was it at work? At play? Or, at that marvelous junction where work and play and inspiration and the Holy Spirit all join hands in a synergistic symphony of joy?

Sadly, my experience with "work" is that magic rarely occurs in the presence of plodding daily details, especially when overseen by administrators whose concept of creativity involves ensuring that we stay inside the lines when coloring. Perhaps that's why true creativity, business breakthroughs, iconoclastic outbreaks mostly take place in small businesses, in entrepreneurial climates, in "skunk works" (labs that are not necessarily operating within the bosses' rules), and in basements or garages.

Happily, my experience as a writer does sometimes achieve this delightful creative storm...in fact, as I prepared my sermon on Psalm 121 (preached 1/27/13 @ Faith Presbyt Ch)...I almost felt guilty, the study, writing, and preaching just flowed like water downhill! All kudos to the Source of all inspiration, might I add...okay, I must add!

Sometimes, writing has this magical flow...such as my book of children's Christmas stories (THE ANIMALS OF CHRISTMAS)--these stories just came to life with vigor and humor and charm. Other times, it isn't bad once I get started, but getting started--WHEW! I feel like I'm battling my way through a million cobwebs: individually, nuthin; collectively, feels almost impossible to get a move on. But, with perseverance, the cobwebs yield and then I'm off and running. How true of so much of life, it's the getting off the start-line that's the absolute toughest part. And, how true and often that a mere cobweb of a hindrance keeps me from starting any project, simple or complex!

Howzabout your experience? Had a "wow" lately when things just fell together, and you stood back, amazed and pleased and proud? Fought (or are fighting) huge cobwebs?