LITR 3731: Creative Writing
Lecture Notes

 

assignments, business

fiction submission

 final

fiction: Paul & Peter

quiz

[break]

reading discussion: Marcus

genres > fiction basics:

conventions

Question: What are different strengths, appeals of narrative + dialogue?

 

 


 

Thursday, 29 October: Fiction workshop + discussion of reading assignments

Reading assignmentThree Genres, ch. 17 (pp. 189-198); ch. 18 (pp. 199-208)

Reading highlight: Marcus Austin

1st Fiction Author:  Paul Acevedo

1st fiction Author’s Discussion Leader: Peter Becnel


Thursday, 5 November: Fiction workshop + discussion of reading assignments

Reading assignmentThree Genres, ch. 19 "Escapes" (pp. 209-216); ch. 20 "Creating Tension" (pp. 217-225)

Reading highlight: Jennifer M. Leonard

1st Fiction Author: Karina Ramos

1st fiction Author’s Discussion Leader: Jackie Baker


Thursday, 12 November: Fiction workshop + discussion of reading assignments

Reading assignmentThree Genres, ch. 22 (pp. 238-246)

Reading highlight: Karina Ramos

1st Fiction Author: Jeff Derrickson

1st fiction Author’s Discussion Leader: Amanda Pruett

2nd Fiction Author: Jennifer M. Leonard

2nd fiction Author’s Discussion Leader: Jackie Baker & Alicia Costello

 

 

 

 

178 cutting blocks of material is painful > Lost Gems file

 

180 initial memory

 

borrowed memories

 

pure invention

 

181 imagine self as new reader

 

 

 

 

 

189 viewpoint, point of view, means of perception, [perspective]

viewpoint does not equal attitude

 

189 1st person = I

190 third person [limited]

 

190 increases readers’ sense of identification

 

190 maintains suspense

 

191 deliberate withholding of information

 

 

 

197 4 first aid steps

 

198

 

1 don’t tear up draft

 

2 write sample x abstract analysis

 

3 trust instinct

 

4 focus: look at first and last pages

 

 

 

200 episodes in life > scenes in fiction: basic units

arrangement of scenes = plot

 

200 “Sausage & Beer”: 3 major blocks: hospital, visit, bar

 

 

 

206 pace < style: length & complexity of sentence structure

 

206 rate of revelation

 

206 high-speed car crashes & catastrophic explosions x subtlety of theme and richness of character

 

 

 

Three Genres, ch. 17 (pp. 189-198) Viewpoint: who’s seeing this?

 

189 fiction x-drama, film: eyes of a specific character

enter character’s mind, only guess what others thinking

other characters reveal minds through though, action

 

189 viewpoint, point of view, means of perception, [perspective]

viewpoint does not equal attitude

 

189 1st person = I

 

190 third person [limited]

 

190 increases readers’ sense of identification

 

190 maintains suspense

 

191 deliberate withholding of information

 

191 most novelists, only 2 or 3 characters = means of perception

 

191 experiments

 

191-2 author’s intrusion, 18 & 19cs < stance of stories told out loud

 

192 > illusion of entering story directly < film?

 

193 limited omniscience

 

194 [story as reality to be traversed, quarried]

 

195 first person for naivete or innocence of young protagonist

 

195 x-phonetic spellings > phrasing for accent

 

195 third person = holding material at arm’s length

 

196 convert sample paragraph

 

196 focus does not equal viewpoint

 

196 reviewing your options

 

197 x-analyze too much too soon; keep feel of story

 

197 4 first aid steps

 

198

1 don’t tear up draft

2 write sample x abstract analysis

3 trust instinct

4 focus: look at first and last pages

 

 

 

 

ch. 18 (pp. 199-208) Structure: from scenes to plot

 

199 clock time, psychological time > sequence of episodes

episodes: setting, character

links blur

 

200 episodes in life > scenes in fiction: basic units

arrangement of scenes = plot

 

200 “Sausage & Beer”: 3 major blocks: hospital, visit, bar

 

200 flashback = scene within scene

 

200 number and length of scenes

 

202 flashback = episode before main flow or base time of plot

 

202 past perfect > flashback

past of past

 

202 how come out of a flashback?

Action or dialogue clearly from base time

 

202 or present > past (“Three Hearts”)

 

202 even careless readers follow cues without idea how they work; writers aware of techniques

 

203 flash-forward increases distance

 

204 frame story = 1 long flashback

 

204 openings and closings

 

205 show, don’t tell

 

205 x-explain at end

 

206 pace < style: length & complexity of sentence structure

 

206 rate of revelation

slow down: digression, speculation, description, any exposition

 

206 high-speed car crashes & catastrophic explosions x subtlety of theme and richness of character

 

206 openings = high rate of revelation

 

207 alternate between vitality of fresh plot development and richness of description and exposition

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


fiction submissions

 

Examples of fiction submissions

Draft exchange:

Jonathan

+ JT chapter from novel

 

Workshop

Karen Heidrich

 

 

Model assignments