New
Kid On The Block
(Odyssey: The Fantasy Writing Workshop)
by Lea C. Braff
(from The Market List Web)
To begin at the end, here's what happened to me on
the day I left Manchester, New Hampshire after the 1998 Odyssey
Writing Workshop.
As I stood in the crowd of "Seats 30-60"
ticket holders waiting for Southwest Airline's gate to open,
I heard a familiar voice behind me. Erica? I knew that she
could not be there, but I whirled around. Nope, no
Erica. On the plane headed home, I heard another one, off
to the right, just out of sight. Morgan? No, Morgan could
not be on this flight. Nevertheless, I looked for him.
I couldn't help myself. Finally, in Baltimore-Washington International
Airport, it came again, behind and to the left. James? This
time I managed not to look. Really, it couldn't be him.
Yes, I hallucinated voices on the way home.
My husband and son met me at the airport, so I had no excuse
to feel lonely. No excuse except that the bonding process
in a well-run workshop is intense.
Structures set up to reinforce that intensity
comprise the strength of a writing workshop. They're probably
the source of rumors circulating about the experience. You
know the list: They're hotbeds of well, hot beds, the students
springing into liaisons. Participants can't write a word afterward.
Workshops change lives. They're magic.
I had heard those myths. Uncertain about
whether I had what it takes to make a career in fiction, I
wanted the luxury of six full weeks to think about nothing
except writing. Earlier, Clarion East twice found my stories
good enough for an Alternate's slot, but because it's rare
for anyone to drop out of Clarion, that did not get me out
of town. (Clarion West didn't even offer a place as Alternate.)
After I turned fifty, I fretted that some time soon I'd be
too old to do it. When I read and heard good things
last winter about Odyssey, the new kid on the workshop block,
I decided to give it a try. I sent in my fifteen-page writing
sample, this time to Jeanne Cavelos, Odyssey's director.
Jeanne is a former senior editor at Dell
Publishing, founder of the Abyss line of horror, and author
of The Science of the X-Files, The Shadow Within
(a Babylon 5 novel), short fiction, articles and essays.
Even after the glorious letter saying "Congratulations!
You have been accepted into Odyssey," arrived from her, I
dragged around mental baggage: I would be the oldest person
present. All the brilliant young hotshots would write rings
around me. Women only would be attracted to a workshop labeled
as "Fantastic Fiction," not "Science Fiction."
None of my worries were rooted in fact. It
would have been hard to find a more heterogeneous group of
people in North America. Twelve men and eight women started
the course, from all over the continent. In age, we ranged
from 17 to older than me. Jeanne asked each of us to bring
our all-time favorite genre story; there were no duplications.
The depth and breadth of the genre knowledge they exhibited
impressed me. The first morning of class, Jeanne asked each
of us to say why we wanted to write fantastic fiction rather
than ordinary mainstream fiction. To a person, each one said
what I was thinking, that this genre is more beautiful, more
exciting, more full of wonder than any other.
Jeanne structured the course rather strictly.
Every working day of the six weeks, all participants meet
for class lecture. It ran at least an hour and a half, sometimes
longer. The topics covered included showing versus telling,
setting, character, point of view, plot building, suspense,
and exposition. Some of it must have seemed redundant to the
English majors, but to those of us who never thought about
the topics in any systematic way, the presentations ranged
from eye-opening to revelatory. For example, Jeanne advocated
outlining a story before it's written, a brand-new idea to
me. It sounded a bit mechanical, but I wrote it down with
the rest.
After a short break, class reconvened for
critiquing, this time with the chairs arranged in a large
circle. Everyone needed to see everyone else. For the first
three weeks, that meant twenty students plus Jeanne and any
visitor, but during the second three weeks, the students numbered
nineteen.
We read and critiqued at least two stories
every day, sometimes three. I'd arrived with the notion that
this would be a fast exercise, but it was no such thing. We
read each story twice. First we read it quickly, as if reading
it in a magazine. The second time we read more slowly, making
notes about usage or grammar, asking questions when confused,
even suggesting other ways to say what we thought the writer
was trying to convey. Jeanne drew up a checklist of things
to look for. I found that I could not critique a story in
under two hours.
Each person provided four stories over the
six weeks. A few of the more daring members brought no old
stories with them and wrote all four on site. (I was not that
brave; two stories were tales that looked good at home. Only
at home, as it turned out.)
Eight guest speakers appeared, mostly writers,
but once the editor of Absolute Magnitude, Warren Lapine,
and once Dr. Jack Cohen, the well-known geneticist. We feted
each visiting dignitary at a very low-key reception. (New
Hampshire College rules mandated no liquor or beer, so guests
munched potato chips and sipped soda.) The original idea of
the receptions had been that students could meet well-known
writers in an informal setting, but shyness and the awkwardness
it brought meant that usually the famous person wound up surrounded
by a ring of staring faces, each student struck dumb. Patricia
A McKillip, John Crowley, Ellen Kushner, Delia Sherman, James
Morrow, Harlan Ellison and Warren Lapine all cheerfully soldiered
on despite the initially uncomfortable situation. By the end
of a reception, usually everyone had relaxed a bit.
On the following day the guest speaker presented
his or her own views on an aspect of writing that the class
was currently exploring. Because we easily fell into the attitude
of The-Word-According-to-Jeanne, visitors provided a healthy
antidote.
John Crowley, for example, discussing "point
of view," said about second-person p.o.v. "If you can
get away with it, then write it that way." (Jeanne later clarified
that just because he could pull it off, didn't mean
that we could.) Delia Sherman urged us not to ". .
.worship at the shrine of the god of Plot." Patricia McKillip
set us to writing exercises, which surprised everyone. (We'd
quickly got used to the idea of lecture-only.) Each writer
brought his or her own gifts to bear on the subject at hand.
The visitor also critiqued stories during
the class period with the rest of us, one of the most useful
aspects. In addition he or she talked to two or three students
separately, about stories sent ahead of time.
So things buzzed along for three weeks. The
group fell into the habit, initiated by Julia Duncan and Sharon
Keir, of meeting around the picnic table in front of the unlovely
row of our grandly-named "townhouses." With no air conditioning,
it was worth fighting voracious mosquitoes to unwind and learn
more about each other than permited by the oddly intimate
process of critiquing.
But an undercurrent of tension became more
and more prominent as week four, Harlan Week, approached.
--------------------
HARLAN WEEK
Harlan Ellison was the only writer who stayed
a full six days on campus with us, in the same spartan quarters.
Many of us had read everything he'd ever written. Others boned
up, especially with the stories in the new book, Slippage.
Most of us knew the legends apocryphal and real
that have swirled around him for more than thirty years. We
got tapes of his Politically Incorrect appearances
and made time to view them. As the fourth Sunday approached,
people got jumpy.
Which was amusing in retrospect, because
he and his wife Susan couldn't have been more charming during
the initial reception. Nevertheless, one man proved resistant
to the charm, and during Monday's class, packed up and left
for good.
On Monday morning, Harlan started by saying
that he'd read Julia's story first. We nodded. All of us knew
that Julia was a fine writer. Then he talked about how disappointing
he found the rest of the stories in the pile.
My story was in that pile. I started to squirm.
The language got warmer, and pretty soon
we were all squirming. Harlan believes that a writing workshop
is something like an encounter session, and acted on that
belief. Our structural and grammatical shortcomings were pointed
out in painful and emphatic detail. For example, my story's
title was ". . . in the first percentile of really awful titles
ever written by anyone in the history of the literature."
(To find out more about that week, go to Ellison Webderland
(http://www.menagerie.net/ellison/ellihome.htm)
and click on "Harlan Teaches.") So it went, person by person.
There is one thing good about this mode of
critiquing. It is tremendously motivational. When Harlan Ellison
(Harlan Ellison! He whose stories exploded in my brain
thirty years ago, and still do) tells you that your story
is emotionally dishonest, you do pay attention.
He was right, of course. That story did not
evoke any true emotion. Class broke up and everyone scattered
to write the next day's story. (He assigned three topics during
the first three days; we were also expected to read each other's
work. I hear that this schedule was kinder than what he's
demanded in the past.)
I've experienced problems in finishing stories,
but never in starting them. Until that week, beginnings were
always easy. That Monday afternoon, however, I stared at the
screen for an hour and a half before I began writing. It was
a very, very short story with a simple plot. But by god, it
was honestly felt.
So the week went. Harlan gave out funny alien
refrigerator magnets when a student improved, which sounds
like a dumb motivator, but it worked. Harlan made himself
available almost all the time, emotional tempests blew up,
the weather turned hot, the lack of air conditioning and of
sleep told on everyone, Susan Ellison had to leave early.
Three people got sick and one of them needed the emergency
room. (Fortunately, none of the illnesses proved serious.)
By Friday, twenty-one exhausted people faced each other in
the circle. It was over at last.
I cannot compare the experience of that week
to anything, because I've never experienced anything like
it. Army veterans tell me that Basic Training contains the
same elements. All right, I'll accept that. It certainly bonded
the group. On Saturday most of us met as usual at the picnic
table to say farewell. Harlan passed out the final goodies
more magnets. We knew that nothing an editor ever told
us later could compare to what we'd already heard. Mostly,
we felt happy for the experience.
Whenever I sit down at the computer, I remember
some of what he said. Harlan hates computers, both because
they let us write too fast and because it's too easy for the
wrong word to intrude. "Write your next story with an actual
pen on actual paper," he suggested. "That way, you can feel
the words." I did it, and understood what he meant. Another
time he said, "Read the finished story out loud. The problems
will jump out at you." They do, you know.
--------------------
When I arrived on campus, I worried about
missing television, but my housemate and I decided to skip
it. Miss it? Within two days, all of us were plunged into
the Ocean of Story, much richer and more interesting than
anything could ever be on the tube. We plugged into a web
of new relationships, too, when an outing to a Lebanese dinner
topped by belly-dancing, or an evening walk on the beach,
became genuine highlights. We experienced them more deeply
than we ever would at home.
It took a week to unpack and to feel like
I had really come home.
I believe I think about fiction in a different
way; certainly, I am less easily satisfied now. I outline
stories. (Maybe it is a time-saver, at that.) I read my stories
out loud when I think they're done, and usually discover that
they're not done yet.
If you want to find a 1998 Odfellow at a
con, look for someone wearing our snappy light blue on black
T-shirt. The back reads, "You have no talent, and I must scream."
If I want to hear the voices of my classmates or Harlan's
again, all I have to do is start writing a story.
--------------------
Odyssey: The Fantasy Writers Workshop
Jeanne Cavelos, Director
20 Levesque Lane
Mont Vernon, NH 03057
http://www.sff.net/odyssey/
About the Author:
Lea C. Braff is the secret identity behind
fiction writer Rosemary Sullivan. Both of them are a middle-aged
woman who lives an exemplary life in the Midwest, made much
more interesting with the addition of large amounts of fantasy.
Copyright © 1998 by Lea
C. Braff. All Rights Reserved. |