Mobsters and Writers

In what many consider a classic American movie, Godfather II, the mob financier Hyman Roth tells Michael Corleone, "This is the business we've chosen."

I pause to take stock and reflect on Kindle by the Sell's first ten posts. I hope they have proved helpful to my fellow authors or at least helped frame thoughts and options. One in particular impressed me because the GR community responded with a collective yawn to the July 30th posting on the subject of Query Letters. I can only conclude, despite the enormous difficulties the non-writing aspects present as well as the formidable marketing obstacles, self-published authors embrace their independence and accept the challenges as part and parcel to "the business we've chosen".

In confirmation, Amanda Hocking's meteoric and improbable rise to self-publishing success proved for many an endless source of fascination. As if her very unlikeliness made it possible to finish the next chapter, acquire the next review, gain the next GR friend, and thus perhaps curry sufficient favor with the very fickle literary gods.

Many who put up websites in order to say 'yes' when asked if they had one, PM'd to express dismay at the effort needed to make it a viable marketing ally. None imagined having to wear another hat labelled 'website guru' and yet, when confronted with the cost of hiring one, that same implacable, dogged determination to soldier on rose to the fore. I will admit to a sense of pride and awe in my colleagues.

I will further admit an earlier corporate life, before I reincarnated as a writer, made the technical requirements of a modern independent author an easy transition. Still, writing a novel is far more difficult than the HTML needed to make your website an unflagging marketing assistant.

Many also felt no need for a success that extended beyond the quiet satisfaction of finishing the novel that had been a lifelong dream. That every few weeks brought an encouraging review from an appreciative stranger was all the reward they needed from 'this thing of ours'. There is a lot to be said about 'quiet satisfaction' and my admiration for them has only grown.

So all in all, I can't say if this blog after ten postings met my expectations. I had none. In fact, not knowing where it would lead mirrored the same eager anticipation in writing a plot where an unpredicted twist or turn can emerge without warning. What it has done, however, is deepen my appreciation for a group who refuse to let anything diminish their desire to write.

In a poignant scene from the first Godfather, Don Corleone says to his son, "I never wanted this for you. I wanted you to be the bigshot." Michael gently responds, "We'll get there, Pop. We'll get there."

Such as it is, that's enough business, let's turn to the creative side.

It seems that 1st person novels are all the rage today so of course, I'm going to speak about the 3rd person. It never occurred to me I would write in anything else so I never even bothered to research it. For me, omniscient existed only as a divine attribute. I did, briefly, consider the 1st person but as a fiction writer thought it too confining. I salivated at the prospect of making a reader the proverbial fly on the wall, privy to all the delicious details, listening to a group of characters, aware of the lies, deceit, and mischief behind the innocent conversation.

It is my style to keep nothing from a reader. I hold in contempt that most wretched of literary tricks, the red herring. Arming the reader with all the facts entices them to anticipate future events. Shattering expectations with unpredictable twists and turns is the foundation of suspense.

Thus it surprised me to come across an article in which the author posited that most novelists avoid the 3rd person as too difficult. I read on to discover my understanding of it a simplistic one.

I had, of course, already learned the 3rd person had the imposing title of omniscient but here came two more: multiple and limited. Some of the eggier egghead periodicals go so far as to create two additional subcategories, objective and subjective. I'll leave it to the more ambitious to investigate them but I cannot escape the sense they simply exist to give MFA professors something to talk about.

Limited third person also has a narrator but only provides the thoughts and emotions of the protagonist. I'd be very interested in anyone who can recommend a book employing this viewpoint. Multiple third person again has a narrator but increases the number of characters whose thoughts and emotions are available to the reader but not to the all-encompassing extent omniscient does. Learning their existence did not tempt me to abandon omniscient. Again, as a fiction writer, why shackle my imagination?

Nonetheless, I welcome my 1st person colleagues to comment on their decision. Not to justify it. None is needed or expected. But simply to provide us the basis for all wisdom: perspective.

Lastly, as I wrote this blog I uncovered a hidden gender bias. I've always assumed, that is, 'heard' my narrators as male. I'm curious if any of my male colleagues hear theirs as female. How do female readers hear theirs? Is it possible for a writer to deliberately give a narrator gender? What purpose would it serve? When I read my next 3rd person story will I hear...her?

As always, I welcome your thoughts and comments.
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Published on September 10, 2016 07:06
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message 1: by E.G. (new)

E.G. Manetti Another thought provoking post. On the topic of independence versus a publishing contract - there are a lot of reasons I don't chase the second. 1) I knew with a bit of research that the type of genre mashup I write would be a hard sell. It does not meet the trope requirements to be classified as 'science-fiction' or 'fantasy' or 'romance' - although it has elements of all three. 2) A publishing contract does not make things easier - the smaller houses still leave it to the author to use social media to build and audience and take a bigger share of the royalties than amazon. The larger houses are looking for blockbusters. If your 1st book isn't, you won't get much support for the next. 2) The query letter process is as time consuming as marketing directly to the reader, and - in the case my work - just as much of a lottery.

Time and experience may change my mind, but for now, the independent path makes the most sense.


message 2: by E.G. (new)

E.G. Manetti As for narrative voice - I went back and forth between 3rd person limited and 3rd person omniscient. I settled on limited because I have sufficient characters to get my points made by one of them and I found the story flowed more smoothly. That said, I cheat a bit with chapter intros in 3rd person omniscient that aid in the world building without awkward info dumps.

Which, leads into gender bias - when writing or reading, I hear the narration in the gender of the person whose head I'm in. In omniscient, I hear a female voice, probably because I am.


message 3: by Rafael (new)

Rafael E.G. wrote: "Another thought provoking post. On the topic of independence versus a publishing contract - there are a lot of reasons I don't chase the second. 1) I knew with a bit of research that the type of ge..."

Had the same problem, EG. I naively submitted my first three novels to agencies and felt quite proud to call them 'mixed genre' thinking they'd be impressed with my not enclosing myself within a genre box. Little did I know at the time, agents, at least in America, thought such storylines had to be as confused as the author.

But I always did think agents and agencies who expect an author to bring a developed platform defined cheekiness and chutzpah. You want me to write the book, provide a built-in market, AND pay you 15% ?!?! Get over yourself !!

Still, I just won't give up the idea there's an agent out there I can catch at the exact instant Venus' rotational perturbations mastrufinate in perfect alignment with Uranus' apogeal plane.


message 4: by Rafael (new)

Rafael E.G. wrote: "As for narrative voice - I went back and forth between 3rd person limited and 3rd person omniscient. I settled on limited because I have sufficient characters to get my points made by one of them a..."

I'm slapping palm to forehead while exclaiming, "Of course!" For those who may be unaware, besides a tremendous human being, E.G. Manetti is too modest to suggest her books of the 'Twelve System Chronicles' which tell the fateful lives of Cartel Preeminent, Lucius Mercio, and his contracted concubine, Lillian Faesetili, are sterling examples of 3rd person limited.

At the same time, the realization brought a deeper one. Once I establish a book I'm reading is in the 3rd person, I, and I suspect most readers, just don't make further distinctions between omniscient, limited, or multiple. Who cares, and except for dorky literary critics, who would notice? Keep right on cheating, EG. It's not hurting your stories. At all.


message 5: by E.G. (new)

E.G. Manetti Rafael wrote: "E.G. wrote: "As for narrative voice - I went back and forth between 3rd person limited and 3rd person omniscient. I settled on limited because I have sufficient characters to get my points made by ..."

Thank you for the shout out. ;D


message 6: by E.G. (new)

E.G. Manetti Rafael wrote: "E.G. wrote: "Another thought provoking post. On the topic of independence versus a publishing contract - there are a lot of reasons I don't chase the second. 1) I knew with a bit of research that t..."

Fingers crossed the stars align for you.


Tara Woods Turner Wonderful post! I offer The Good Earth by Pearl S. Buck as a flawless example of third person limited. As for first person, I can't say it is a perspective that comes naturally for me but its potential is not to be overlooked. Excellent first person is notoriously difficult to achieve and I posit the belief that far too many writers imagine they are better at this than they really are. The best first person gives us the revelatory advantages of the omniscient - that can only go off without a hitch when the writer is so adept at character building (not necessarily plot) that his protagonist is not only observant to a fault but self-reflective enough to cover all the bases in regards to explication for the reader. Add to this the fact that the writer must pull off this deep cover in plain sight in a way that is organic and seamless and you understand how difficult it is to do this properly. But the pay-off is huge. The reader establishes a voyeuristic intimacy with the protagonist that invests him faithfully in the narrative from prologue to epilogue. Incidentally, this is why, in my opinion, the best first person is told from the perspective of children. The writer is able to use the keen perception, natural curiosity and unspoiled forthrightness of the young to provide the reader with as much of nformation as any third person pov ever could. The first chapter of Jane Eyre highlights this well.

That brings me to another point. Flashback narrative also helps make first person a little more palatable. The protagonist has the benefit of hindsight and distance to aid in the writer's choices about what the readers should know.


message 8: by Rafael (new)

Rafael When I researched the post, Tara, I did not come across any articles or writers who explained, detailed, and elaborated the issues surrounding 1st person writing as thoughtfully and succinctly as you did. Certainly none as elegantly.

Thank you, Tara !!

And thank you for the 'Good Earth' suggestion. I read it in High School but remember little of the class assignment and essay requirement. I will circle back whence I came. :-)


Tara Woods Turner Rafael
You are kind. I absolutely live for literature - the debt we owe the written word pales in comparison to the scribblings we offer to it but, as writers, offer we must!
PS - Pattison's blog is a goldmine. The bookmark icon on my ipad has had a real workout today.


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