My sequel to DEMON is nearing
30,000 words so I’m thrilled with that progress. A few writing sites covered what
has become popular again – the list of no-no’s for writers. It’s not that I get
upset when I see this stuff. I find it amusing when agents and publishing
houses collect this stuff to feed back to us in the editing rounds. The advice,
supposedly to make our manuscripts into beauteous tightly wound editor’s
triumphs, sends out waves of angst amongst the writers reading the no-no lists.
I’ve decided to take a look at reality in bestselling novels, by a number of my
favorites to illustrate some points I’d like to make. First up, Master Stephen
King.
Let’s look at the dreaded
adverb first. Nothing according to the experts makes a reader’s head spin on
their shoulders like an adverb. On one page of the book ‘Needful Things’ by writing
master Stephen King on page 194 of my hardbound first addition, which I opened
at random, he incorporates three unnecessary but completely okay with me
adverbs – happily, impatiently, and rarely. Then on the next page, Master King
used ‘hardly’, and three instances of ‘barely’ – barely felt, barely heard, and
barely speak. Oh… the pain. To add insult to injury, Master King had a
monstrous simile on page 194. What’s the big deal you ask? Well, according to
editors and writing experts today the simile should only make an appearance
once or twice in an entire book. Lucky me, I popped open Master King’s ‘Needful
Things’ to find one in the second paragraph of the very insightful page 194 – “…Frasier
had hustled a protesting Keeton over to the betting windows like a sheepdog
nipping a wayward lamb back o the herd.” What luck, 685 pages, and I picked the
very page where Master King must have deposited his only simile. Ah contraire,
my friends. I pop it open in my hands once more to page 476 and find another seething
simile – “Holding a swatch of Slopey’s tee-shirt in a fist which was nearly the
size of a daisy canned ham…” with a sprinkling of ‘hoarsely’ and ‘happily’
adverbial sins thrown in for good measure. You’d also need an adding machine to
count up the master’s weak verbs in his tome. I’m not doing it.
I’m not writing this blog to
make fun of anyone. I’m writing to point out the fact writing advice should not
be taken in the form of holy gospel. Yes, if Master King had done a word find
of happily and barely, he would probably have done a little more editing. I
loved ‘Needful Things’. It was horrifying, nostalgic, and gripping. I like it
just as it is. The agents and editors will of course laugh, claiming ‘yeah,
well you ain’t Stephen King, Sparky’. No, but I’d like a little common sense
and logic entering the debate of whether to strip a manuscript down to the
point where it reads like a first grader’s prep book ‘Spot sees the ball’, ‘Jane
throws the ball’. Rather than yanking the reader out of a paragraph, an adverb
will flow as easily as ‘said’ in a dialogue tag, unless of course, you use one
like ‘barely’ three times in the space of a few lines. Master King… really? :) I will return to this subject a few more times.
6 comments:
For me, the closet thing to a "rule" I have for writing is 'never throw a tool out of your tool kit." An adverb is a tool and there are times when it's the right tool.
Exactly, Charles. :)
So true brother. Apparently everyone is a expert lol.
Hey Bennie, I was trying to contact ur friend Jordan Summers to see if she wanted me to read and review Hot Shot for her as she doesn't have any reviews for that book and it looks like my kinda book. However, the verify button doesn't work on her blog so I can't contact her. Can you contact her for me pls? Thanks brother
Also, I can't seem to join your garage/blog
It's true, RJ. We're all supposed to write with our own 'voice' but they keep coming up with sections of the language we're not allowed to use. :)
Jordan may see your note here, but I will contact her and leave the info, brother. I will look into the join button. It looks like it disappeared off my site. :)
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