Sometimes
great ideas go horribly wrong. Is there a book with a genius premise that you'd
like to rewrite?
-from
Susan
Definitely, starting with a few of my own that exist
only in beginnings. Interesting premise, new characters, I’m off to a great
start. Twenty minutes into my whirling brain activity, I realize she can’t do
that for a living because…or, he can’t fly off to Chad because…or I don’t know
the first thing about Spanish law enforcement. Genius thwarted, again.
Seriously, there are lots of crime novels that start
strong, perhaps because we authors work like demons to get off to a good start,
having been told a thousand times that we have to hook readers by the first
page, or paragraph, or even the first sentence. (I don’t believe that, quite.
If it’s well written and charms us, aren’t we willing to at least turn one
page? Come on.) Anyway, I am involved, ready to stay with the author’s clever
idea.
But around page 50, something begins to wobble. It
might be the plot, in which something too improbable happens, clearly arranged
only to create The Conflict. Or, the protagonist does something that shrieks of
discontinuity with character, something that the person the author has gone to
pains to create would not do, period, like leave her beloved new husband in bed
on their honeymoon to investigate a strange sound out on the dark lake. Or –
and this one is bigger for me than for some readers, I know – the writing is
flat, repetitive, unexciting, and I can’t ignore it. It gets in the way of the
storytelling and pulls me right out of the book.
I’m hesitant to name names because I’m sure the
author wrote the best book he or she was able to at that moment, as I do
myself, and because most of what I’m saying is subjective. You might love the
book I just tossed aside. Heck, it might even win awards, be praised by
reviewers and in blurbs, sell lots of copies. I recently read a debut novel
that had an interesting premise, but which had me wanting to slam the book
against the wall when the character, who had behaved like one person for 250
pages, morphed completely, without explanation, into a different person
physically and mentally, in the last 20 pages. And, the saddest thing about
that was that the idea for the story was a good one, worth 250 pages. In answer
to this week’s CM question, yes, I would have written a different ending, one
that completed the circle of the story, the character, and The Conflict.
If I go back in time, to stay on safer ground, I’ll
admit that as much as I love Agatha Christie, her later books, spy stories like
They Came to Baghdad (1951), start
with an interesting idea in a fascinating environment but don’t play to her
talent. They have a synthetic, stagy quality that leaves me cold. She operated
best in her fantasy worlds – the small town, the locked room. John Mortimer
created a wonderful character in Horace Rumpole, but then he drove the conceit
into the ground with stories that did have small, clever plots, but in which
the dialogue was interchangeable from one story to another. In an excess of
enthusiasm I once bought all three Rumpole
Omibuses, but I haven’t made it more than a story or two past the first.
There is one book I remember desperately needing to rewrite
and that was when I was about eight or nine: A Christmas Carol. I did not think Tiny Tim should die, and at the
Christmas Future point in the narrative would have written to Mr. Dickens to
tell him. It was a great story until that moment, and then – amazingly – Mr.
Dickens came to his senses and wrote my ending to the story. I’m so grateful
that at least one author took my advice.
3 comments:
"I recently read a debut novel that had an interesting premise, but which had me wanting to slam the book against the wall when the character, who had behaved like one person for 250 pages, morphed completely, without explanation, into a different person physically and mentally, in the last 20 pages. And, the saddest thing about that was that the idea for the story was a good one, worth 250 pages."
But, Susan, don't you feel cheated when that happens. An author can get away with almost anything if they set it up, but when it comes out of the blue like that I'd just feel ripped off of my most valuable possession -- time -- and probably never read anything by that person again.
Definitely disappointed, Paul, and, sadly, I'm not likely to read the second. The author is new at this and didn't intend to rip me off. The publisher, though? That's who I blame, for letting this one out of the barn.
Susan-
You're such a great writer that I think I can guess the book you're talking about--and I agree!!! I also hate to name names of any living authors...
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