"An
interstellar adventure story worthy of Golden Age masters like Isaac
Asimov and Robert A. Heinlein. " -
Dave Duncan, author
of the Seventh Sword series, the
King's Blades
series and
Children of Chaos
Web
edwardwillett.com
LIBRARY
NAVIGATION
SYSTEM:
Click on a CD to
access data
"Write what you know" is one of those tiresome bits
of advice that beginning writers are forever having thrown at them.
As a science fiction writer, I've always rejected
this particular maxim out of hand, because, after all, I've never been a
homeless street musician who ends up sharing a cheap hotel room with an
eight-tentacled orange alien, but that's how my novel Andy Nebula:
Interstellar Rock Star begins.
If I limited myself to writing what I know, I always
figured, I'd be stuck writing about the life of a freelance writer and
actor in Regina, Saskatchewan, which, while it is not without interest, is
never going to win me that Hugo Award I'd so dearly love to have.
I've disliked that bit of advice ever since I wrote
my first short story, Kastra Glazz: Hypership Test Pilot, when I
was 11, and I disliked it all through my teenage years, as I turned out my
first three (unpublished, and going to stay that way) novels: The
Silver Sword, Ship from the Unknown, and Slavers of Thok.
And yet...
I just had the pleasure of being the preliminary
judge for the Saskatchewan Writers Guild's Write On X writing contest for
children and teenagers. I read 138 entries from students aged 15 to 18
from all over the province (at least, I assume they were from all over the
province; for anonymity's sake, they didn't have names or addresses on
them). There were some excellent stories, the 25 of which I thought were
the very best I passed on to the judges who will pick the award winners
(and no, I'm not going to tell you which ones they were; those of you who
entered will have to wait like everyone else for the final decision!).
While reading these stories, I suddenly realized
that, in fact, everyone writes does write what they know; after
all, you can hardly write about something that isn't in some way present
within your mind. What influences the quality of the writing is how you
know what you know.
I came to the conclusion, about halfway through the
pile, that what a lot of the young writers knew came from television and
movies.
TV and movies are really big on car crashes. They're
easy to stage, they're dramatic, and they offer the special effects guys
an opportunity to make the car explode in flame halfway down the cliff
(even before it actually hits anything, sometimes, which is a pretty good
trick). If the plot is flagging, throw in a car crash.
At a rough estimate, I'd say at least a third of the
stories I read featured car crashes. The victims varied: sometimes they
were new girlfriends or boyfriends, sometimes they were other family
members, and sometimes the narrator him or herself was involved. But after
about the 20th story involving a car crash, I couldn't help but sense a
(probably) TV-inspired pattern.
Other life-threatening situations were also popular.
I read stories about cancer, anorexia, diabetes, bicycle crashes (a nice
change from car crashes, I admit) and falling through the ice. Alcohol and
drug abuse showed up, too, as did a fair helping of physical and sexual
abuse, homelessness, prostitution and child pornography.
Sadly, it's quite possible some of these writers
were writing from first-, or at least second-, hand experience, but I
think it's equally likely that a lot of them were drawing on TV
depictions. I'm not saying teenage writers shouldn't use these elements,
and, indeed, many of the stories that did use them were well done and were
represented in the 25 finalists I chose; but I do think they should be
aware that they're plowing an already well-plowed field when they do, and
they're going to have a tough time creating a story that isn't an awful
lot like dozens of other teenager-penned stories out there. (Teenagers
were also writing these same kinds of stories when I was a
teenager. I guess it's an angst thing.)
The stories that really piqued my interest in this
contest were the ones that revealed an imagination at work plowing new
fields, imaginations that appeared to have been nurtured by more than just
TV and movies. With a well-fed imagination, you can "write what you know"
even if you're writing about aliens or dragons, because you know
those aliens and dragons; you're able to imagine them so strongly that
they're as real to you as your neighbors (maybe more so).
And how do you create a well-fed imagination? That I
can tell you that in three words:
Read. Read. Read.
I look forward to reading the future published work
of some of the young writers who entered the Write On X contest this year.
But I hope they will nurture their imaginations a little more richly, so
that when I read their first novels, there's won't be a car crash in
sight.