photo by Peter Yoon
In the latest Glimmer Train bulletin, Laura van den Berg discusses the evolution of how her stories get written and shaped into a collection, or a book. She begins:
In my early days of writing stories, I somehow came to operate under the following assumption: whenever you amassed 200 pages worth of fiction, your work would undergo a miraculous transformation into a book. I took my first stab at writing a story collection in college. The result was a 210 page manuscript entitled Hush, an ungainly mishmash of domestic realism, ill-conceived Beckett homages, and flash fictions about trees with real human feelings (true story!). While I can think of many excellent collections that demonstrate great stylistic and technical range, the “eclectic” approach was not working for me.
She goes on to discuss the difference between a “group” of stories and a collection. Read the entire piece.
Other pieces in this month’s bulletin:
Reading Before Writing by Roxana Robinson
Habits by Samsun Knight
Empathy by Ming Holden
The Writer-Traveler by Lisa Gornick
The post How a Collection of Stories Comes Together appeared first on Jane Friedman and was written by Jane Friedman.
Published on November 01, 2013 02:00