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News, Fiction Updates & General MusingsBreaking Bad, The Wolf of Wall Street, and Celebrating The Tragic Antihero
I’ve finally been binging away on AMC’s Breaking Bad these last few weeks.
Yep, I realise I’m like, years behind. I’ve just been so busy these last couple of years that I’ve been completely out of touch with any television beyond The Walking Dead, so it’s been nice to finally sit down and watch (read: lie in bed and binge) on a load of episodes recently. And y’know, the show has really got me thinking about the role of the tragic antihero in contemporary fiction, and in more wider terms, in society.
Spoiler alert: Walter White does some pretty nasty things. As the show progresses, in the supposed expectations of a “hero”, we should technically stop watching and root for Walter to just, like, die on the spot.
But we don’t. Instead, we want to see just how much further his descent into the dark side can go.
I also recently watched The Wolf of Wall Street at the cinema. A true story about a bloke who exploits the poor to line his own pockets should really be a lesson in morality; a tale where the viewer roots for the police officer rather than the infamous Jordan Belfort.
But we don’t. We want to see Belfort’s rise and fall. We want to experience it in all its drug-laden, booze-soaked anti-glory.
What is it about characters like Walter White and Scorsese’s representation of Jordan Belfort that makes us want to experience their rise and downfall? Well, the answer goes back some time. Way back, to the time of the Greek tragedy.
According to the helpful chaps at Wikipedia, a tragedy is “a form of drama based on human suffering that invokes in its audience an accompanying catharsis or pleasure in the viewing.” I won’t go full on historian or Lit student here (I did that enough during my Lit degree), but think Shakespeare. Think Macbeth, Hamlet, Coriolanus. All of these stories feature a central protagonist with a fatal flaw that ultimately leads to their downfall.
Breaking Bad is a modern tragedy. Some have suggested that it reflects a growing trend of more complex, “true-to-life” characters. I’m not sure. I think that tragedies have been with us our entire lives. Take Scorsese’s Taxi Driver, or Roeg’s Don’t Look Now. Both films feature protagonists with fatal flaws, which ultimately lead to their downfall (with slight modern variations). Both films are forty years old now, suggesting tragedy has been around (and acclaimed) a lot longer than it is credited for.
I write tragedies. I don’t intend to, and I never really considered myself as a “tragedy writer”, but I do. It just happens. Although it isn’t always as clear-cut as “hero has fatal flaw that leads to their downfall”, books like The Watching Trilogy, Killing Freedom, Dead Days — even Dying Eyes — incorporate tragic themes. In The Watching Trilogy, each character is filled with obsession of some sort, which leads to their subsequent downfalls. In Killing Freedom, Jared is addicted to killing, as much as he hates to admit or confront that idea.
Most interesting in this study is Dead Days. Yes, it’s a zombie book, but those who are enjoying the series will tell you that it’s more a human tale than anything else. A tale of human flaws. The protagonist, Riley, leaves people behind. He makes horrible decisions to save his own back. He makes the decisions that we would make, but are too afraid to admit. Sure — he redeems himself later on, but those decisions eat at his sanity right through the series. A tragic, flawed character, who will never be the same, but so utterly, utterly human.
Tragedies do not fit in to the common idea of what a plot arc should look like, not at first glance anyway. Ask most plot experts and they’ll tell you that the contemporary plot goes like this:
Opening > Inciting Incident > Try/Fail Cycle (this part varies) > Climax > Resolution > New Equilibrium.
Now, I don’t disagree with this formula. Most of my works would fall right into this, in fact, as would 99.9% of other work.
However, I do think that it is misinterpreted sometimes.
The resolution, for example, is commonly accepted as the point where the hero conquers the villain, leading to a “happy ever after” of a new equilibrium. This satisfies the reader, and I am not arguing with that.
However, I believe that there are different ways for the resolution and the new equilibrium to be approached in fiction. Take The Wolf of Wall Street again, as it’s such a great example, as well as fresh in my mind. Spoiler warning here, by the way. Jordan Belfort is arrested. There’s no way out — he’s going to jail. That is the climax/resolution phase. The “hero” loses out.
But there he is, in the new equilibrium, playing tennis in prison, paying everybody off, and just being all smug about it.
And there we are, as cinema viewers, even after all Jordan’s debauchery, grinning away and kind of glad he didn’t suffer too rough a time in prison, even though we know he’s in the wrong. We revel in his smugness with him, as viewers.
That right there is a clever, clever twist on the climax to new equilibrium phases. In common terms, The Wolf of Wall Street would have concluded with Jordan Belfort outwitting the police, avoiding prison, and giving up on his illegal activities, opting instead for his family. A “sail into the sunset” ending.
Instead, we get the “hero” losing in the climax, and then going back to his old ways in the new equilibrium. The hero doesn’t change. Just like Hamlet, who dies a revenge-driven man.
Sound familiar? Yep. Both tragedies.
I haven’t reached the end of Breaking Bad yet — I’m about twelve episodes off — but I’d wager a bet that Walter White does not have a sudden dramatic character shift and realise all the wrongs he has done, cheating death and returning to a normal life with his family in the comfort of their home (I hope not, anyway, or I’ll feel cheated). He’s too far over the line to return to normality. I can, however, imagine him going down in a blaze, trying to protect his family. I can imagine him relocating completely for the safety of his family, continuing his meth making empire for himself.
In other words, I can imagine a modern twist on the tragic ending where Walter White loses lots but wins a little.
I might be wrong. I probably am. We’ll chat about that when I reach the finish line.
Another thing — tragedy doesn’t mean miserable. Breaking Bad isn’t miserable. The Wolf of Wall Street is the most fun I’ve had at the cinema for years. It just means that a driven character with a fatal flaw slips further down the spiral. How the surrounding elements are presented depends on the story.
The tragic antihero is as strong in modern fiction and contemporary society as ever before. Take Edward Snowden, Julian Assange — these guys are supposedly the “bad guys”, and yet they get cheered on for their actions. They’ve lost all normal life as they know it forever in pursuit of their goal, but in a way, they’ve won, too. Look all through history and you’ll see similar figures.
I’ll continue to present the tragic antihero in my fiction because I love doing so. Not all the time, but a lot of the time. In fact, I’m working on a new project right now which is a multiple perspective novel that inspired this post. A bunch of people with fatal flaws in the form of unwavering goals. How dangerous the ramifications are in their cases… you’ll see. More on that in the future.
Have a great weekend. And oh, don’t spoil Breaking Bad for me. I’ll go full-on tragic antihero on you if you do.
Ryan.
Escapism vs. Reality Check: On Creating Honest Fiction
UPDATE: Some good discussion on The Passive Voice about this topic. A few clarifications from myself in the comments, as well as some great points from others. Check it out if you’re interested in some further reading: http://www.thepassivevoice.com/01/2014/escapism-vs-reality-check-on-creating-honest-fiction/
I’ll let you in on a little open secret: my fiction is grim.
Not grim in the quality sense of the word. I happen to think it’s pretty good on that front. But grim in mood. Tone. Grim in character, in setting, and in the twists and turns of plot.
Writing grim fiction is something I’ve always done, really. I’m a fan of dark comedy, gruesome mysteries, as well as complex character studies. That’s what I’m interested in, as a reader, and that is reflected in my fiction.
However, I know there is a different kind of reader out there to me. A reader who enjoys positive spins on life; a reader who enjoys transportations to fantasy worlds much more idyllic than our world. I like these works too — there’s nothing like a quality fantasy or sci-fi to transport your imagination elsewhere (note: I am not referring to all sci-fi and fantasy here. This is just a plucked out of the air example for example’s purposes). Escapism is a good way to switch off from reality. Sometimes, we don’t want reminding of the harsh realities of the world. We get enough of miserable reality in the media.
That said, ‘reality check’ works are my personal fascination. One look at my published works should be enough to give that away — What We Saw impersonated a cute childhood mystery, but background themes of marriage breakdown, domestic abuse and mental health issues hung over the story like a dark cloud. Most people got this, but some people didn’t like this — many reviewers questioned whether the book was a kid’s book or an adult book. They spoke of the lingering sense of mystery; the sense that not all was resolved in the conclusion.
This is the exact reaction I was looking for.
It doesn’t stop there, either. Killing Freedom is a thriller with a hit man protagonist. Dying Eyes is a *spoiler alert* detective mystery with a wrist-cutting, self-destructive lead. *spoiler over* The Watching Trilogy… well. Does anybody ever get a happy ending there?
The fact of the matter is, I like writing challenging characters because that’s what I like reading. I like writing escapism too — you can’t read The Painting and seriously tell me I do not enjoy that — so I guess I like interchanging themes.
But the question is, should fiction have to be about escapism? Should it have to be about happy endings, neat resolutions and clean-cut characters?
You know my answer to this already. I believe not. Hell — maybe I’m being naive. Maybe I’m losing a section of the reading market by refusing to adhere to what we are apparently supposed to write. But that’s okay, because I know there’s a smaller section of the market who do want to read these ‘reality check’ works. A group of readers who do enjoy character studies. A group of readers who enjoy being forced to question their fiction.
Obviously, like I said, this isn’t a swipe at escapism writers. There are some fantastic writers at that side of the writing spectrum. But I guess this is just a cue to writers to write to their strengths, rather than writing for an audience. Write with the door closed — write art, in whatever form — and then think about the marketing afterwards.
I’m going to put my hand on my heart and tell you a very honest secret now, something I’ve never spoken about. Back in August, I wrote a sequel to Killing Freedom. I wrote it because I felt I had to write it. I never really intended to follow-up Killing Freedom — at least, not for a few years — but apparently, the series is the way to go.
However, I wasn’t impressed with this sequel. It didn’t hit the heights of anything else I’d written. It felt like a forced thriller; like I was forcing myself to write something I felt I should write rather than challenging myself to write something I know I can write.
I’ve canned the book. Tossed it away. Deleted all eighty-thousand words from my hard drive. Maybe I’ll revisit Jared one day. In fact, I likely will. But it has to be for the right reasons, or I’m failing the characters and I’m failing my readers.
This isn’t a dig at series novelists, either. Quite the opposite. For example, I’ve just finished and am preparing to release my sequel to Dying Eyes. Now, this is a book I’m delighted with. Brian McDone is such a deep and complex character, it’s always such a joy to write him. This book isn’t a sequel for the sake of a sequel — it’s the sequel that has to happen.
Same goes for Dead Days Season 2, which will launch in March. Dead Days is the most fun I’ve ever had writing anything, but I know there is so much still to explore. I want to really study Riley’s reactions to certain character deaths. I want to develop Claudia — believe me, there’s SO much more to come from her. And there are just countless situations I want to explore, not because I can, but because I absolutely have to.
Anyway, I digress. I guess the point of this post is to write whatever it is you are good at writing. There is no right or wrong way. There is only honesty.
If you stay true to yourself, you will write the best fiction you possibly can.
If you try to be someone else, you won’t.
It really is as simple as that.
Anyway, I spoke about the Dying Eyes sequel. I can right now officially confirm the title and share with you the amazing cover, designed by Yoly Cortez. The book is called Buried Slaughter, and is launching this February. More details in the next few weeks. To be notified as soon as it is available, click here (and get a freebie in the process)
Dead Days Renewed for Season Two!
Hello all!
Just wanted to share a nice writing update this week. Firstly, I’d better get straight to the headline — Dead Days is being renewed for a second season!
When I say “renewed”, what I mean is I’ve decided I love the world so much that I want to continue to story. And yes — it might be a bit of a non-announcement after the way Season One ended. But still, I just wanted to make it clear to all the people who have kindly emailed me that a Season Two is definitely happening.
How’s that for a confirmation?
Thanks to all who have got in touch about Dead Days. It’s been by far my biggest success yet, and for that I’m really grateful. I think what makes Dead Days different to all the other zombie books out there (and believe me, there’s a lot of them) is that it’s essentially a tale of humanity more than a tale of zombies. Riley and co are humans. They make shitty, selfish decisions. Decisions that we don’t like to think we’d make, but let’s face it, when faced with a chance of survival and near-certain death, we would make them. I think people have connected with this dark fact.
Or, who knows? Maybe you just enjoy all the zombie guts and gore. 😉
I would absolutely love to talk Season Two with you right now but the truth of the matter is that it’s very much still in its planning stages. I have a vague idea of where this story is going to go. Season Two is different to Season One in that I only planned for Season One (in case it flopped and people like, threw bricks at me and stuff). But now I’ve reached Season Two, I have to start thinking about the future. I really want this series to last five seasons. That’s my target. So I’ll plan for that, and then when we reach the fifth season, who knows?
I’d hate to give a set-in-stone release date and disappoint you, but I’d like to have Dead Days Season Two out this spring. I hope that isn’t too vague or ambiguous for you right now, but I’d hate to say “MARCH 6TH!!” and end up letting you down.
It probably won’t launch March 6th.
Or perhaps it will.
IGNORE ME.
Release schedule will probably be the same, although I don’t know. Most people pick up the free first episode then move on to the full season boxset, so I’m contemplating just releasing the box set and episodes simultaneously. What do you think? I quite like the weekly serial formula though, and with more people on board for Season Two, it’ll be a fun ride I’m sure. I really want people to get involved with this story, emailing me their “WHY DID YOU DO THAT”s and such. Should be fun.
Anyway, I hope that’s an adequate teaser for the time being. Dead Days Season Two is coming this spring. Be notified as soon as it is available by clicking here (free goodies included). If you enjoyed the first season, then I promise you it will not disappoint you. Unless it does, in which case, thank God it wasn’t a pinky promise.
If you haven’t read Dead Days yet, then you might as well. The first episode is free, after all. Why the hell wouldn’t you? HUH, HUH?! Details here.
As for other projects, I’ve been grafting hard on the sequel to Dying Eyes. The first draft is progressing very nicely, and I’m so pleased with this twisting, turning mystery at the book’s core. It’s more focused than Dying Eyes, I’d say. There aren’t as many red herrings. Everything is significant. This is going to be a book that you want to read again and again.
Well, that’s the intention.
Release date for this? Well, I’ve got my revisions to do, then my editing, so… February? Soon enough for you? Truth is, I’ve been working on this book secretly for a while now, long before the Dying Eyes release. So don’t worry — fans of Mr McDone are going to have another crime mystery to sink their teeth into very soon.
And what a crime it is. 🙂
Over the next couple of days, I’m going to get planning a new project. It won’t be Dead Days, or McDone — it’ll be something completely new. Whether it’ll be a serial, a standalone, or a series novel… we’ll see. Should be great working all that out.
Oh, oh, something I almost forgot to mention. If you’re a Google Play reader, then all of my books are now available on the Play Store! Great news for me and for you readers. You can find a full list here.
Hope you’re having a good week!
Ryan.
We Are All Storytellers: Why Writing Talent is a Myth
I’ve enjoyed writing for as long as I can remember. I’ve also enjoyed reading for as long as I can remember.
When I was younger — and I’m talking high school years here — I had an arrogant belief that I was born with the talent of a writer. I felt that, because I was me, this born writer who was quite obviously fantastic with words, I could do things that my classmates hadn’t even considered. So while one classmate was just about finishing writing a linear story, I was throwing the elements back to front, all because I felt I was born a writer. It was a ‘talent’, and therefore I could. Sarcasm alert.
This belief in the myth of ‘talent’ continued up to the point that I finished my first novel. Writing that first novel was hard, don’t get me wrong. It was a test of motivation and endurance, and believe me, no novel is ever as tough to write as that first one.
Writing that first novel made me realise that writing isn’t a talent. It’s an ability, sure, but I wasn’t born with it, and neither were you.
Writing is storytelling, and storytelling is reading.
Let me elaborate: when we’re born, I truly believe that we’re born a relatively blank canvas aside from basic survival instinct. If this doesn’t align with your beliefs, then that’s fine. Take what I have to say here with a pinch of salt. Anyhow, I believe that when we are born, we aren’t born with any real interests or talents. But from that moment we’re born, however, we start absorbing a wonderful thing called story.
Whether it’s a nursery rhyme or a lullaby, a first book, a television show or a family anecdote, we become absorbers of story the second we enter the world. We base the future on narratives of the past. So, we don’t put our hand in the fire, because it’ll bloody hurt, because we learned from when we did it in the past that it BLOODY HURT. That’s story, right there. The avoidance of the burned hand is the (fortunate) resolution based on past experience/story/etc.
Fast forward to present day. I’m assuming you’re an adult of some age or another if you’re reading this. Over the course of your life, you have absorbed billions — and I mean billions — of stories. You absorb them every second of every moment of every day, whether it’s a feared trip to the dentist or sitting down in front of your favourite weekly TV series, or Dan Brown book, or action film, or whatever. The truth of the matter is, we aren’t born with a talent for writing. Writing, as in spelling and grammar, is taught. Storytelling, however, is absorbed.
In essence, whether we read ten books a week or haven’t picked up a book in our lives, we’re all readers. Watching films is reading. Watching television is reading.
So what is reading when framed in this manner?
Reading, in my opinion, is the simple interpretation of narrative signs. Reading results in a subconscious understanding of story.
And that is why, in my opinion, when a person picks up a pen for the first time to write that first novel, assuming they watch way more TV than read, they are at the exact same point as a person who has spent a lifetime reading thousands of books.
Sure, the person who reads more books might have a better idea of how to format into chapters and the like. And obviously I’m assuming here that each person has a basic grasp of spelling and grammar. But the person who watches all the TV serials will be at the same point as a storyteller as the avid reader, because they too have been subconsciously absorbing story all their life.
Writers are just readers who decide to pick up the pen. We enjoy story, like everyone, and decide to share stories of our own in the written form. It isn’t a talent. Sure — writers improve their craft over time, but again, that’s a learned thing. A practise thing. Just like we’re always improving our reading with every story that drifts into our life, we’re always improving our writing when we commit words to paper.
So yes, that person who told you you couldn’t write because you weren’t ‘born to write’ because you haven’t got the ‘talent’ is speaking absolute drivel. You weren’t ‘born to do’ anything.
But you’ve lived to learn story. So pick up a few books on spelling and grammar, have a little read about story structure to grasp the essentials, and then just write a story.
Keep on reading, too.
Even though it’s impossible to stop reading.
I write this blog because I enjoy blogging. However, I’m a fiction writer 90% of the time. If you want to sample one of my works of fiction (priced under $4.99) free of charge, then sign up to my Fan Club by clicking here. Or, consider buying one of my books to help with the running costs of the website. I’d really appreciate it. Thanks.
Image courtesy of followtheseinstructions via Flickr.
New Year’s Resolutions for Writers 2014 Edition
Hello all,
I hope you had a wonderful Christmas. We’ve just about finished off all the leftovers, which I do find slightly depressing. Turkey is so much better in the days following Christmas, in my opinion. Ah well. Now’s the time for looking forward. Roll on Christmas 2014!
Oh, wait a sec. There’s twelve months to get through before we reach that point. Twelve months which, quite frankly, are supposed be framed by all sorts of short-lived goals and ambitions. Yep, it’s that time of year again — New Year’s Resolution time, which for writers, usually follows a predictable pattern.
Firstly, the most common New Year’s Resolution for writers without a novel to their name is the obvious one — to write a book. This is a good resolution. After all, writing a book is a handy part of being a writer. 😉
However, the same thing happens every year. I’ve been there, don’t worry. But what usually happens is something like this:
The first few days go great. Writer starts to question why they held off writing for so long. Ideas are flowing. Dialogue is flowing. Story is flowing.
Week two arrives. Writer goes back to their day job. Hours of writing gradually decrease, as does motivation to work on novel. Writer might skip a day and justify doing so by saying they are ‘tired’ or ‘don’t have the time’.
Week three arrives. Most writers have given up at this point. Or rather, they are ‘taking a break’.
I can guarantee that these writers will never finish that novel. Ever.
So yes. There is a downside to New Year’s Resolutions for writers, and that’s the whole idea of New Year as an event. Writing a novel should be something you motivate yourself to do in your own time. New Year can be a motivational springboard for this, however the New Year’s Resolution to simply ‘write a novel’ is slightly off the mark, in my opinion.
Instead, why not commit to writing one-thousand words every day for the year? Or even more?
Yeah. Scary, right? I can hand on heart say I didn’t do that every day last year (although my word count for the year is way higher than that daily average). But by committing to a clearly set goal, you’re forcing yourself to find the time to write. You’re forcing yourself to be motivated.
There will be days where you get in from work exhausted, but you refuse to go to bed until you write.
There will be days where you have no idea where your story is going, but still, you write.
You don’t judge your words. This is an exercise in thickening your skin as much as it is writing a novel.
If you stick to this 1,000 words per day rule for a whole year, you will have a whole load of stories finished this time next year, and you’ll gladly be able to call yourself a professional writer.
Just think about it. By pushing through those times where you have zero motivation, you’re training the muscle in your brain to battle through the tough times. If you can conquer that, then you can conquer anything.
Anything.
Replace ‘write x amount of words per day’ with whatever your chosen creative or business endeavour is. The fact is, a lot of a little adds up to a lot. Think about that for a second. It makes sense.
So yes. New Year’s Resolution for writers number one has to be to set a daily word count goal and stick to it for a whole year.
This advice is interchangeable for newer and more experienced writers, too. Everybody needs a motivational kick from time to time, so this should be enough to do so.
Remember: it will be tough. It absolutely will not be easy. But if it was easy, everybody would be doing it. Nothing is easy. We have to work hard to reap the rewards. It’s always been this way, and it always will be.
To be honest, that’s my main New Year’s Resolution for writers in 2014. Work hard. Produce new words. Everything else — publishing, marketing, social media, blogging — comes second to new words. Without new words, you cannot progress as a writer. And sure — you can promote that first novel of yours as long as you want. But if a reader has nowhere to go after that first book, then they’re going to be disappointed.
We’re in a golden age of fiction. Sure, there is a case for refraining from publishing everything we write. I believe in this too, and damn, I nowhere near publish everything I write. And yet, I’m still considered ‘very prolific’. But even so, I still find this a little absurd. I just write a couple of thousand words per day and publish the best of them (once they’ve been rewritten, edited, polished, of course). I write a couple of thousand words per day and I feel like I’m being lazy. And yet I’m considered ‘very prolific’. Madness!
My personal New Year’s Resolution for 2014 in writing is to write and publish everything on my publishing calendar. Now, you should see my publishing calendar. It’s quite a thing of terrifying beauty. In a nutshell, I want to publish three new Brian McDone novels.
And a second season of Dead Days.
And a whole load of other stuff in between.
It’s going to be tough, but it’s going to be a hell of a lot of fun to try out. And if I can look back this time next year at my publishing calendar and see even a quarter of it crossed off, I can be confident I’ve had a prolific year. I won’t get down if I don’t hit my goals — I have fall-back goals, just in case. Win win for me.
So yes. New Year’s Resolutions for Writers in 2014. Work hard. Produce new fiction. Don’t get bogged down in the marketing side of things aside from a mailing list and a blog/social media presence. With the latter, don’t spam, just be yourself. Publish quality words. Repeat.
Simple, eh?
I wish. 🙂
Have a happy new year. Here’s a list of some New Year’s Resolutions for writers I wrote last year but are still just as applicable today. Pick and choose. Hope one or two of them are useful to you in some way.
– I will finish this first draft
– I will write for an hour every day
– I will find the time to write every day, no matter what
– I will find out how many words I can write in an ideal hour, and write that amount every day
– I will set up my website and blog when I have something interesting to say
– I will connect with fellow authors and readers via Twitter and Facebook
– I will stop neglecting Google+ (okay, that’s just me)
– I will conquer the rewrite
– I will seek the help and advice of critical friends
– I will help others
Happy New Year,
Ryan Casey.
How to Find Book Ideas, or Why Perfection is a Load of Crap
I wanted to start a little series about writing in 2014, but hell, I’m bored with lazing around already so I figured I’ll start right now. Post one: how us crazy writers find book ideas.
You might’ve read a few weeks back that I was taking my blog in a more fiction oriented direction. A direct response to the masses of OOA (Outdated On Arrival) marketing ‘advice’ that sends newer writers on wayward paths, and a focus on the long-term. Yup, rule number one: writing is a career thing. If you want short-term success, go elsewhere.
Or don’t, and just prepare to be disappointed.
Okay. Now we’ve got that rant out-of-the-way, I wanted to talk about something that I’m asked about more than anything. A question that completely baffles me every time I’m asked it, because I really do not know what to say. It usually goes something like this: how on earth do you find book ideas?
Full disclosure. I used to ask other writers the same question. I used to sit down in front of a blank sheet of paper and just wait for that perfect book idea to enter my head.
And I waited.
And waited.
Immediately, looking back, I can see what I was doing wrong, and I’d bet it’s the very same thing new aspirant writers do wrong, too.
Firstly, when trying to find book ideas, I was obsessed with the idea of perfection.
Now, this might not be easy to hear. This might just go against everything you believe, in fact. But the truth is, when trying to find book ideas, no idea is perfect. The sooner you can accept that you just need a ‘good’ idea, the better.
But then there’s another side to this whole hunt for perfection, and that’s that no idea is necessarily ‘bad’ either.
Yup. Any old crap you jot down has the potential to be a really intriguing story to somebody.
Again, I realise this goes directly against what you’re taught at school, or what you read in several fiction writing books. But trying to find book ideas should not be a decision process of what is good and what is bad, because fuck, what the hell do you know about selling fiction?!
Sorry to be blunt, but it’s true. We’re our own worst critics. If we start judging our ideas, deciding one thing is probably going to be ‘boring’, then that’s our inner critic talking. So instead, you should settle on an idea that intrigues you. Simple as that. If it’s something that you honestly, deep down, feel like you want to explore, then run with it.
Even if you think it’s the worst idea in the world, give it a shot if it feels right. You might just be surprised.
I want to introduce the second part of this ‘finding ideas’ question, and this is something else that flies directly in the face of everything you’ve likely learned up to this stage, but bear with me. The second part is this: you do not need a fully formed idea at the idea creation point.
Hell, I’d argue that you don’t even need a fully formed idea at the writing stage, but that’s a personal thing. But the truth is, I wouldn’t bother trying to map out a load of plot twists and turns when you are ‘coming up’ with an idea, because chances are you’re going to either get bored or run into something you don’t like and end up throwing the whole thing away. All you need is a trigger. A little something that interests you. Then, you can write. Simple as that.
WHAT?! No planning? No extensive character sheets? No research?!?!
Sure. You can do all that. I do it sometimes. But the truth is, you don’t have to. Because doing all that can see you snowed under in the hunt for perfection once again. The truth is, you can just write if you want to. Just write and see how it goes. Sure — if this isn’t your style, don’t do it. But if you want to do this, try it. There is no right or wrong method.
Of course, if you do want to just write, I’d recommend studying plot and narrative beforehand. The three-act structure, screenplay structure, Lester Dent’s Master Plot Formula — all of this is helpful stuff that, once understood, can be subverted to a writer’s own will. But don’t try to force structure if it doesn’t feel natural. Of course, there needs to be some kind of story there, which leads on to my next point.
But how do I ACTUALLY find book ideas?
Simple. You think up a character. You give them a problem. You write about them overcoming that problem, the problem intensifying as the story goes on, and either defeating or (less common) losing out to the problem, and thus becoming a changed individual at the end.
Okay, this all sounds very formulaic, but put on an episode of your favourite TV series, or one of your new Christmas films, and just study the structure of it (read: watch it and eat loads of popcorn). Chances are, it’ll follow this structure to some extent.
And yes, clever clogs, even unconventional movies and stories adhere to this formula in some way. Just because Memento is told in reverse doesn’t mean there’s no character with no clear problem. Just because Gone Girl is a split-perspective novel stuffed with multiple narrators doesn’t mean there aren’t characters battling with problems. This is the way of modern fiction. Only by understanding can you even begin to think about subverting.
But really, I don’t even have to force ideas anymore. Usually, they come to me. That’s the truth. I have a huge note filled with ideas I’ll likely never visit. Here’s an example of a few, just to show the diversity and range — not to mention how little I judge when this inspiration strikes:
– Monster/noise in the fridge…
– SINKHOLE: Where do they end up?
– THE REAL WORLD IS HELL :O
– Gritty as fuck hitman novel
– Immortal jellyfish – Elixir of life discovered and goes mainstream
– Caffeine addiction story; ‘Something in the Teacup’…
The list goes on, and it gets more peculiar in places. But as comical as some of these ideas may sound, I can immediately imagine characters in the world of those ideas with problems. I can see that poor caffeine addict struggling with his tea addiction as it turns him into some evil being. I can see that person waking up at the other side of a sinkhole in some parallel dimension. I can see the monster in the fridge.
How does a writer find book ideas? Simple. We don’t. Ideas come to us. Or if we need to ‘come up’ with an idea, we imagine a character with a problem. We explore. We don’t judge.
We write.