Today's guest of Lisa Regan, author of the bestselling Josie Quinn Detective series. Lisa joined me today to talk about writing a character over such a long series, the beauty (and pressures!) of a dedicated fan base, and research for police procedurals.
On Expressing Thematic Concerns
by Elizabeth Kirschner
I’d like to say a few words about the expression of one’s thematic concerns, or obsessions, that is, how they find their way into the poem, piece of memoir, story.
All the old idioms insist that the writer’s obsessions must be expressed, not stated. That sounds fairly oblique. As does Pound’s insistence, “Go in fear of abstractions,” or William Carlos Williams dictum “no meaning, but in things.”
It all has to be expressed in a highly physical manner. The reader must be able to intuit what the writer is trying to say via the senses: smell, taste, sound, sight, touch.
By means of example, here’s a passage from one of my own stories:
“I place my hands deep in my brother’s moccasins which I haven’t moved from the rocker’s seat. I wear them that way for a minute, ridiculous mittens, then put them back, nestle them close as veterans sharing identical scars.
It’s self-portrait after self-portrait: my profile shaded in ash, prim as trash, the curve of cheek rounded in vegetable peel. A face of unidentified viscera.
The shadows of snowflakes, flickering like dark birds. My father spoke, my mother listened. They occurred, like a sink full of water, voices a cloth submerged, unclean in the equine rot of night.
If we note the physical language, we can get a feeling for what this narrator is feeling:
After putting her brother’s slippers on her hands, like “mittens” she nestles them close, “like veterans.” The word “veterans” connote experience, does it not? One in which the narrator and the brother even share “scars.”
In this way, we begin to deduce a few things about their childhood, that it may be “war-like,” yet the word “mittens” suggests warmth, comfort, until we hit that discomfiting word, “ridiculous,” which undercuts our presumptions.
Note how the speaker’s self portrait is conveyed. “Shaded in ash.” “Prim as trash.” Such a description suggests an older narrator, not a child, but language is how the reader constructs a palpable sense of who each character is.
“Trash” is a powerful word. Coupled with “prim,” we get a clear sense of how the speaker views herself.
The reader’s thinking is further colored by “the shadow of snowflakes.” Note the position of the word “shadow,” how it dominates, overpowers the word “snowflakes.”
Both words represent actual things, i.e., we can see, even smell a “shadow.” Put a verb with it, then we can even hear it, “the shadow sings.”
Likewise, a snowflake has a physical presence. In this instance, it’s flickering like “dark birds.” This creates a mood, does it not?
Then we come to the parents. Who “occurred.” Note how inanimate that feels, how this gives them more thingness than presence, especially as it’s expressed in past tense. The word “occurred” is immediately backed into a simile, “like a sink full of water.”
The work of simile and metaphor is to compound things, to layer in complexity, let language work double-time. “A sink full of water,” denotes inertia, uncleanliness. This is characterization.
Note that the parents’ voices are submerged, “a cloth,” which suggests a desire for erasure. The passage ends with, “In the equine rot of night.” Consider the sensory impact of these words. How “equine” qualifies “rot.”
Isn’t the reader left with a disquieting portrait? Doesn’t the word “rot” color the whole passage? Note that, this far, I haven’t “stated” what this story is “about.” The idea is for it to unfold, sentence by sentence.
Here’s the ending to a different story:
“Her cries tasted like limes. As I walked down the spit, crabs scuttled on the beach. Increasingly human, increasingly scowling, so helpless, warlike.
With the scowls of warriors imprinted on their backs, each was a solitary criminal. They reminded me of my sister, Harmon, the painting, which created its own vocabulary, stiff as a broken neck, or a trinity of moths, the color of waxed paper.”
We look for clues in the text to help us interpret what the writer is trying to express. “Her cries tasted like limes,” is an image of freshness, tartness. It is even intimate, as it suggests that the speaker is literally tasting “her cries.”
Next we latch onto the crabs scuttling on the beach. We “see” the crabs. Their physicality is made more complex and concrete by the fact that they’re “scowling.”
Personification, then. The crabs are given human qualities, which makes them more menacing. Stories need a little menace, a sense of threat, that’s where the tension comes from.
But these crabs. Not only are they “increasingly” scowling, they are also “helpless,” “warlike.” Might this be interpreted as the writer’s sense of the human predicament? Isn’t it further complicated by the notion that each one is “a solitary criminal?”
This is how the writer’s obsessions get expressed. In the sheer physicality of the language. Every single word must carry significant weight, if it is to earn its place in any particular piece of work.
Another short passage:
“When I go to sleep, I’m vinegar inside clouded glass. The world comes to an end when I wake up, violence is underwhelming, my mouth, a guarded hearse as the incomprehensible shuffles into place.”
What concerns, obsessions can we glean out of this? What do the actual words suggest?
Clearly, the speaker sees herself as astringent. She has the sense that the world “ends” every time she wakes up, that “violence” is “underwhelming.” Even her mouth is a “guarded hearse,” as the “incomprehensible” comes into play in that last phrase.
Aren’t some of her obsessions made apparent here. How can we not feel her sense of mortality if she experiences every morning as an ending? We know she’s preoccupied with “violence” and the “incomprehensible.”
Doesn’t the story itself try to explicate, or put into action, some of these concerns? Given this paragraph, might not the reader expect some kind of violence, underwhelming, or otherwise to transpire? Might that act of violence lead to the speaker’s mouth feeling like a “guarded hearse?” Doesn’t violence compound our sense of the “incomprehensible?”
In this manner, the story can become the vehicle, the tenor, through which the writer can express, via all the elements of fiction, his or her deepest obsessions.
Plot, characterization, setting, conflict or suspense, some sense of the dramatic that necessarily seeks resolution. POV is involved, as someone, i.e., a character, has to have a distinct vantage point.
Setting is the place to stand. No story can occur without a precise location in time and space. For example:
“Outside the door, the warped distortion of mundane things—utility poles spook the blue, evergreens offer sinister shade—malevolent, nefarious, corrupt.”
The reader can participate in this: he or she can look outside that door, see a kind of warped perspective on things as ordinary as utility poles and evergreens.
The utility poles are “spooked.” The evergreens offer “sinister” shade. Coupled with the three bleak adjectives at the end of the sentence: “malevolent, nefarious and corrupt,” we are once again being influenced, or seduced by the writer.
This is how it works: the writer employs all there is in his or her powers to express, quite simply and complexly, that which can’t be expressed any other way. There must be an urgency, a fierce sense of immediacy and necessity, i.e., the writer must put everything at stake.
If there isn’t a feeling that the story must be told, at all costs, then it’s likely to fail. In this way, it’s akin to love. If one doesn’t give into it in its entirety, if one isn’t wholly vulnerable and committed, the attempt is likely to be utterly doomed.
It’s the attempt that matters. Something will arise out of the attempt, especially if the effort has been wholeheartedly made.
Revision is, shall we say, the house of correction, the place where we can go back and forward, over and over again, until the thing that might have been made in haste, due to that profound sense of urgency, can be remade, reshaped, seen anew.
This is where the writer can luxuriate, take an inordinate amount of time, to make what she or he is trying to say, as nearly perfect as only the imperfect can.
Doesn’t the story call us back to all that matters: bone, skin, that fragment of you surviving in me as I open my mouth to speak? Isn’t it one way to return to the living?
Aren’t stories, with their tornado of moments, a brief sojourn into what makes us most human? Don’t they dismantle and remake what the heart names in some insatiable and utterly inexplicable manner?
In this way, stories swaddle up like capillaries as they pass through the years slowly, in hope of a metamorphosis. I crave that moment of transformation.
The story may begin in hell and end up in paradise, or vice versa, but the journey, the deeply going into and the sometimes horrifying reemergence, the whole mystifying process wherein one thing becomes another, a process which absolutely encapsulates the mystery of narrative and the narrative of mystery, this is why I write, humbly and at times feebly, I write because it always holds me in thrall, and this is how I praise, or practice praising what I feel is the whole human catastrophe.
Elizabeth Kirschner is the author of BECAUSE THE SKY IS A THOUSAND SOFT HURTS, her debut collection of short stories. She has published five volumes of poetry, most recently, MY LIFE AS A DOLL, Autumn House Press, 2008, and SURRENDER TO LIGHT, Cherry Grove Editions, 2009. The former was nominated for the Lenore Marshall Prize, the Patterson Book Prize and named Kirschner as the Literary Arts Fellow in the state of Maine, 2010. Her memoir, WALKING THE BONES is forthcoming from The Piscataqua Press, February, 2015.
Kirschner has been writing and teaching multi-genres across four decades. She served as faculty in Fairfield University’s low-residence MFA in Creative Writing Program and has also taught at Boston College and Carnegie-Mellon University. She currently serves as a writing mentor and manuscript consultant and teaches various workshops in and around her community in Kittery Point, ME.
The Four Reasons Why We Love Dystopian
By Lisa Johnston, author of Wakeless
Whether it is war, environmental ruin, oppression or the creation of a new society, readers seem to be obsessed with the dystopian genre of fiction. According to vocabulary.com, a dystopia is a fictional world where people live under a highly-controlled or totalitarian system. The Cambridge Dictionary describes it as an imaginary society of the future in which there is suffering. In my opinion, a dystopia is a utopia that has gone drastically wrong. Although created with good intentions, it is a place that is far scarier than we can ever imagine.
I have loved dystopian novels ever since I first discovered Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale when I was a teenager. Since then I have devoured many dystopian novels which have included Cormac McCarthy’s The Road and Suzanne Collins’ The Hunger Games. Such books have left me shocked, devastated and horrified, but more importantly, utterly amazed with the creativity of the authors. Each time I was transported from my own ordinary everyday world into something that was fascinating and brilliant, leaving me yearning for more and always sad when the book came to an end.
On that note, following are my four reasons as to why we love dystopian novels.
Escapism
At the finish of a dystopian novel, most readers feel like they have been put through the wringer. Yes, they are horrific, depressing, hopeless and dark – and often too bleak for some readers. But, they also allow us to escape our own existence. When we pick up a dystopian novel, we often forget about our own problems of the day and escape into a world that is even scarier than our own. In the process, dystopian books can make us feel better about ourselves and our own living conditions. We may be social distancing from COVID-19, but at least we are not handmaids living in Gilead.
Fascination
We have all done it: we have driven by a horrific accident scene and turned our head for a glimpse at the destruction and devastation. We have searched for newspaper articles to delve further into a terrible tragedy. We want to know how someone was killed when a body turned up at the local morgue. It seems to be a part of human nature: we are fascinated with terrible things, and nothing is more gripping than an apparent utopia that suddenly takes a terrible wrong turn and plunges its characters into the ultimate physical and mental game of survival. We need to know if the father and son will reach the sea or if they too will fall by the side of the road.
Imagination
All novels take an abundance of work and creativity, but I believe dystopian books are brimming with a deeper level of imagination. They create worlds strikingly different from our own but not completely out of the realm of possibility. We may one day have survival game shows on television where contestants play to the death. We may one day have to live in underground cities as the air above is toxic. This may not be the life we would choose for ourselves as we sit on our comfy couches and order takeout for dinner, but we are fascinated with the creation of new governments, new societal rules and the welfare of those living on the brink of extinction.
Inspiration
Despite all the doom and gloom, despite the oppression, despite the destruction of today’s world, dystopian novels can be inspirational. Many dystopian novels have a hero or heroine who is brave or honourable; someone we can relate to or hope we would mimic if we ever found ourselves in a battle of survival. Good versus evil. Triumph over defeat. But not all dystopian books have a hero for us to love. Some have something even better: a villain to hate, which can be almost as satisfying as rooting for the good guy. Yes, we want Big Brother to fail almost as much as we want Winston to succeed.
From the standpoint of an author who writes dystopian fiction, there is nothing more rewarding—or fun—than creating new world orders, new countries, new protocols and new government regimes. I don’t want to write about everyday life; I am already living that. I want to write something no one has ever thought of before. I want to write about the unimaginable.
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A communications graduate of the University of Calgary, Lisa Johnston is an established writer and editor in the magazine and corporate publishing world. Wakeless is her first fiction novel. Lisa enjoys traveling, reading and ocean walks near her home with her husband and two sons on Vancouver Island. To connect with Lisa and to learn about upcoming releases, as well as receive bonus content, follow her at lisajohnstonauthor.com and on Facebook and Instagram.
WAKELESS follows a young woman, Emma, who has somehow survived the wreckage of the 21st century—when gas reserves have run dry, hospitals have shut and deadly diseases are rampant—and now faces her greatest challenge. Discovered living in a basement hideout, she is proclaimed clean and moved to Redemption City. Despite escaping the contaminated world, Emma soon learns that life is no better in the promised utopia—secrets abound, no one is free and eyes are always watching.
As Emma begins unraveling the true purpose of Redemption City and rebelling against the male hierarchy, she reluctantly joins forces with a potential ally. Troubled by ghosts of her past and an unreliable vision of reality, Emma must find a path to redemption or pay the ultimate price.
Available now from Amazon, Bookshop.org, and bookstores.