Here's a link to the trailer for a film: Grace Paley: Collected Shorts.
Can't wait to see it.
Like a dog that returns to his vomit is a fool that repeats his folly. Proverbs 26:11
Showing posts with label Grace Paley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grace Paley. Show all posts
Thursday, November 17, 2011
Grace Paley: Collected Shorts (the film)
Friday, November 11, 2011
Tips for Writers: Write What You DON’T Know (about what you know)

However, one of America’s great writers of the Twentieth
Century took a different angle on this rule. I had the privilege of studying
with Grace Paley at a little-known writers’ conference in Mexico called Under
the Volcano. I was in awe of Paley, despite the fact that she was this tiny,
somewhat frail, extremely generous and kind, grandmotherly woman. And she was
also full of good advice, including the debunking of some “rules” of writing.
It’s not, “write what you know,” she insisted, it’s “write
what you don’t know about what you know.” Otherwise, it’s boring. For you and
the reader. What’s the point of writing, I think she meant, if you’re just
going to explore known territory. Stretch. Reach. Push beyond and take some
risks.
And sometimes, knowing a subject too well prevents the
writer from really seeing it.
For example, I once wrote a short story set in a coffee
shop. In a workshop, I was told by the leader—a famous novelist—that the
setting was too vague, and that the problem was that I hadn’t fully imagined
the place myself, so of course I couldn’t render it on the page so that readers
could see it. In fact, though, the opposite was true, and the famous novelist
realized this as soon as he’d made his original pronouncement. The coffee shop
of the story was based on a coffee shop I knew well and frequented. The reason
that it didn’t appear clearly on the page was that I knew it too well, and was no longer really
seeing it. I had an image of it in my head that subconsciously I believed
everyone else could see, too. What I needed to do was to really see the coffee shop—the real one or an imagined one—in order
to describe it effectively. I needed to discover things about this coffee shop
that I didn’t know, or had overlooked, and that’s
what I needed to write.
I’m currently writing a novel set in Singapore. I know
Singapore. I lived there for ten years. So I’m able to get a lot of what I need
for this story just from my own experience. But then I’ll push beyond what I
already know to discover some of the history of the country—which is more
interesting than modern readers might imagine—and to “drill down,” so to speak,
to discover things beneath the surface that I hadn’t seen before. But there’s
more to this exploration, because of the character traits I’m writing about—but
I’ll save that topic for another day.
For another take on this issue, see Bret Anthony Johnston's essay from The Atlantic: Don't Write What You Know.
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