Terry here. This week we are talking about whether getting formal
training as a writer is useful, and whether we can teach writing.
I got my master’s degree in English with Creative Writing
focus at San Francisco State University. I loved every minute of the program. When
I was an undergraduate, on the advice of one of my professors, I veered off
from majoring in English, and I majored in political science. He said he thought
if I wanted to be a writer, I ought to broaden my knowledge of the world. I liked my political science education and it
left me with a strong background in government and politics which as continued
to interest me.
At some point I felt
like my writing education had been stunted. There were books I hadn’t studied,
courses I hadn’t taken, so I went back
to school. The curriculum It mostly consisted of literature courses that I had missed.
The classes on writing I hardly remember at all. I recently ran across stories
that I wrote for the classes and found that I had made As in all of them. My take
on that was, “So what?” I learned as much from just writing and participating
in critique groups.
That doesn’t mean I don’t think it was valuable, I just don’t
remember the fine points. I have no idea whether I would be the same writer
today if I hadn’t taken the classes—or if I would have been a better writer, or
a worse writer. No matter how many classes I took, I still struggle with the basics
that every writer struggles with: voice, plot, description, dialogue, and character
development.
What I don’t struggle with is how to write a sentence and a
paragraph, how to state a theme, develop it, and end strong. You may not think
that matters in fiction, but it does. In the opening of the book or short story
you have to give the reader a sense of what she should expect: the theme. You
use your sentences and paragraphs to build your story line, to populate it with
characters, and to set scenes. Sentences work for paragraphs, paragraphs work
for scenes, scenes work for chapters. And if you build the story properly,
eventually you come upon the ending that satisfies the theme. Easy no?
Not exactly. As always, the devil is in the details. And
that’s where writing workshops and courses come in. Some writers who are not only
natural storytellers, but know how to build a book properly as well, without
formal help, without critique groups, without beta readers. But I think those
are rare. Most writers—both fledgling and fully-formed—benefit from classes,
whether they are attending or teaching. Preparing to teach a writing class can
be just as valuable as being a student in one.
I never get tired of attending workshops, classes, panels at
conferences, and critique groups. I don’t always hear new ideas, but I often
hear old ideas presented in ways that I really “get” for the first time. That happened
several years ago with a weekend workshop I attended. One of the instructors
told us that to write a good book we had to reach deep inside and find the
books that only we could write. Old advice, yes. But somehow the way she
presented it made me hear it in a different way. I understood suddenly that
this was not just the admonition to “write what you know.” It meant something
deeper. It meant to dig for something you cherished, something you knew on a
visceral level. Shortly afterwards, I started writing my Samuel Craddock
series. I had written several books before that, but with that series I finally
found my passion, my voice, my setting, and my characters.
I’ve never taught writing in school, but I have taught in
workshops. I like to teach aspects of writing. I love to see the look on a
student’s face when something clicks.
Terry Shames
A Risky Undertaking for Loretta Singletary
www.Terryshames.com
I agree, Terry. It's about the voice, plot, description, dialogue and character development, but, it's also good to have some writing skills and a basic understanding of grammar.
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