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When one looks in the box, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the cat.

Reactor

Author Victor LaValle has written many types of books over the years, from Slap-Boxing with Jesus, a short story collection that took readers to New York in the 70s, to The Ecstatic, a novel about a young schizophrenic man and the family who tries to save him, to most recently, The Ballad of Black Tom, a novella that turns an H.P. Lovecraft story inside out to explore the legacy of racism in America. In an enlightening post for The Center for Fiction, he talks about how he and his friend, Pym author Mat Johnson, left the Columbia MFA program feeling pretty solid as writers. They both published books fairly quickly, and began to feel like real, professional authors (something that’s notoriously hard for even the best writers to do.)

But then Johnson got a job writing a comic book and, as he realized that somehow his well-honed workshop skills weren’t working, he turned to LaValle to talk about what could be going wrong.

“…we both realized that a scripted version of all our published fiction—novels and short stories—might look exactly like that. Scene after scene of people sitting around yapping. Hard to create much drama from people doing the exact same thing on every page.”

What was missing? Story structure. “[We’d] never examined the reasons why we’d told this story in this order.”

As useful as their workshops were, LaValle and Johnson began to realize that there were some holes in their education that comic books might be able to educate them about. (For example, dissect the above opening page to Grant Morrison’s All-Star Superman. The writer tells Superman’s origin story in only four panels. But why tell the story that way in the first place?)

LaValle has since turned this impromptu conversation with his writer buddy into a great piece, “One Thing I Never Learned in Workshop” about the nuts and bolts of writing! Check out the whole post over at The Center for Fiction’s website.

 

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Leah Schnelbach

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Intellectual Junk Drawer from Pittsburgh.
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