Tag Archives | Value of Crits

Crit Theory: Get to the Action

For the latter two parts of my Crit Theory series (see one, Maybe Don’t Start Early, and two, the Positive Sandwich), I thought I’d look at the other side: what I learned about writing through critiquing. I am firmly of the belief that the second best way to learn how to write well is to critique. Discovering and articulating what isn’t (or is!) working for you in someone else’s work can help you diagnose similar problems in your work.

This sexy beast knew all about action-reaction. (Yes, that's Newton. What?)

I’ve done a lot of critiquing over the last year. Fingers crossed I have the same problem this year. (Yes, I am doing Kat-Crits again, though please check the about page for how it works.) And for my more nit-picky comments when doing line-edits, a common note is this:

Switch these two clauses? I think it’s better to start with the action.

Action-Reaction.

Here, have a paragraph:

“Open up,” said his captor.

The man yanked off Glen’s blindfold. Golden hills rolled all the way to the horizon, taller than houses, sand glittering against the sky with each light breeze from the west. He’d never be able to cross that, not by himself. Glen swallowed, his throat already dry.

There are some good things going on here! (I hope.) Active, interesting verbs (yank, roll, glitter). A goal (crossing the desert). Conflict (he’s been captured!, thirst!). But the passage still feels a little off. Let’s look at it sentence by sentence, eh?

(1) “Open up,” said his captor. Blunt statement gives us an idea of the power structure, and the label captor gives us instant context.

(2) The man yanked off Glen’s blindfold. Sort sentence to emphasize the action, and it adds more tension to the captor-victim situation. He was blindfolded! Why? And why release him now?

(3) Golden hills rolled all the way to the horizon, taller than houses, sand glittering against the sky with each light breeze from the west. And here’s where we lose it. Sure, the sentence is atmospheric and interesting by itself, but it doesn’t match the tension created from the previous two sentences–at least not yet. We’ve got two good non-protag actions built in the first sentences. So rather than shifting right into describing the area (reaction), have Glen give us an action.

(4) He’d never be able to cross that, not by himself. This is nice for stakes, but it has the same problem as the above sentence–it’s thought without any context that keeps the reader invested in the scene, in the present. However, it is a good reaction to the scene established in (3). This sentence can stay here.

(5) Glen swallowed, his throat already dry. Here we go! Shock, fear, and foreboding for what might come next. I think this sentence would fit best nestled inside of (3). Not only will that break up the length of (3), keeping up pacing, but it creates good action-reaction flow.

So let’s see what happens when we shift that single sentence:

“Open up,” said his captor.

The man yanked off Glen’s blindfold. Golden hills rolled all the way to the horizon. Glen swallowed, his throat already dry. [The dunes] towered taller than houses, sand glittering against the sky with each light breeze from the west. He’d never be able to cross that, not by himself.

Suddenly the tension is better! The passage flows a little more smoothly. And we remain grounded in the present.

Of course, there are still some problems with the passage. But just a simple shifting of sentences can make a big difference.

So remember as you edit guys–most of the time go for action first, then reaction. Have your character do something that interacts with the setting, and then use that opportunity to describe the setting…rather than the other way around.

Extra points! I challenge you to play around more with the passage. What would you add? Take away? Good luck!

Posted on March 26, 2012 in Crit Theory · Comments { 0 }

Crit Theory: the Positive Sandwich

This continues the Crit Theory series, part 2 of 4. See yesterdays post about Maybe Not Starting Early.

Tomorrow’s post! The importance of breaks.

Public Service Announcement
I’m pretty sure our excellent guest critiquers already know the following.
And by pretty sure, I mean positive. [PUNS!]
So why am I posting this?
Easy: I want everyone to become great critiquers!
Because, after critiquing every which way over the last year, I’ve discovered that critiquing?
It’s one of the greatest ways to learn to write well.
/Public Service Announcement

The Sandwich:

This is not the positive sandwich, though I'm positive that sandwich is delicious. ::chortle:: PS IS THAT BACON? Zoinks, could I go for bacon right now...

Over the last four years of writing professionally, I’ve had notes from people that, at the root, said this:

  • This ending was a letdown. I think you should do a full rewrite.
  • I don’t like your protagonist.
  • Your grammar is totally wrong.
  • Ad nauseum.

Now, if the comments were exactly that, my reaction would’ve been:

I AM TERRIBLE AND SHOULD TOSS THIS BOOK OUT.
SOMEONE GET ME SOME BOOZE.
[guzzles] I AM TERRIBLE AND SHOULD GIVE UP WRITING.

But instead, the notes were written more like this (Positive is in Blue. Critique in Red.):

  • I really enjoyed the tension and lead-up to the climax. Wow, so much great interaction with the characters. And the boys. OH THE BOYS. But…when we got to the climax itself, it didn’t feel nearly as strong as the lead-up, so I was left unsatisfied. [Here are some ideas to fix it!] Don’t worry; you showed great skill in [insert particular scene]. I’m sure you can do it!
  • What an interesting world you’ve created here. I love all the details and word choice, plus your supporting cast is totally rocking, especially [insert particular character and reason he/she was liked]. But I’m having issues connecting to your protagonist because he’s [reason 1], [reason 2], and [reason 3.] [I think this can be addressed by…]. However, in [this scene] and [this scene] I thought you showed your protagonist’s goals particularly well. More of that, because you did a great job with it!

And so my reactions instead were

I LIKE THE BOYS TOO.
Wait… :(
Well, that’s not SO bad.
Hm, that’s a good fix. Oh, and I’ve just thought of a BETTER one.
OH YAYS. ::cracks knuckles:: Let’s start edits!

These examples utilized three important ideas:

  1. The famed positive sandwich. Start positive. State the critique. Finish with a positive that, preferably, relates to the critique. That first girds me for the harder bits, and the second positive helps me lick my wounds and get excited to fix things. (If I agree with the critique, that is.)
  2. Specificity. Sometimes, yes, it is VERY difficult to articulate why you didn’t connect/like something as much. But please try! It can help the author find even more places to apply your notes and learn from their mistakes. Plus, positive specificity is also great, because then we know what we’re doing RIGHT.
  3. Opinion. Lots of filter words (feel, think, seem) or passive voice softens the impact of the critique. That way, the critique becomes the critiquers opinion, and implies that said critique could be totally off base. This is important! Because
    • Sometimes the critiques are off base.
    • Then it doesn’t seem like you’re attacking the author. Thus making the author less defensive and more likely to swallow the crit.

Also, you do NOT have to provide ideas to fix the issues. I appreciate it, and maybe other authors do, too, because it helps me brainstorm, hence why I included it in the examples.

And finally, if you’re doing line edits, be sure to keep the positivity up in those, too. An entire chapter of of “change this, change that, change this, too,” can be intensely hard to swallow. However, more of a “I think you should change this; I think you should change that; Oh, this is great!; change this?; Wow, that’s great, too!” is much easier.

Fragile egos, us writers has them, even if we don’t like to admit it. ;)

Posted on March 21, 2012 in Crit Theory · Comments { 2 }

Crit Theory: Maybe Don’t Start Early

So this starts a brief “Crit Theory” week, in which I wax about what I’ve learned receiving critiques AND giving critiques.

Tomorrow? The Positive-Sandwich.

Public service announcement
This is my opinion. Do what you think is best.
/public service announcement

I wrote two books before I began seeking critiques. Two full books—beginning, middle, end. (Sorta) Plot. (Kinda) Characters. (Some) World-building. Then I joined Rom Critters (a great community that I would highly recommend), and posted my chapters for critique, thinking it’d be like fanfiction.com and everyone would loff them.

HAHAHAHAHA I BET YOU CAN GUESS WHAT REALLY HAPPENED.

This is what happened. 0_0 Yeah.

Even though all my fab critters used lots of positive reinforcement, I didn’t have a good grasp of grammar. I used passive voice unnecessarily. And likewise unnecessary adverbs. I info-dumped and missed plot holes and…

Well. You get the idea.

Thankfully the positive reinforcement kept me from giving up writing. If it’d been harsher? We all know that “You are making every n00b mistake* ever” is a punch to the gut. But that’s only half the reason why I feel writers should wait a book or two before putting their work up for critique.

The main reason? Voice.

If you throw your work up for slaughter critique, you’ll not only get a lot of advice, but some of the more excited critiquers are going to literally tear your chapters apart. And if, in your excitement to improve, you agree to those changes Full Steam Ahead, then your voice, your style, could get lost in the process. You’re work will sound more like the critiquers than you. And if you get lots of critiques, maybe it’ll turn into a Frankenbook.

So I’m very grateful for Rom Critters, but I’m also so glad I waited two books before joining. Rather than writing to please folks, or writing the way you’re “supposed” to, I wrote what I enjoyed. And yeah, maybe I didn’t have the best execution, but the scenes I chose, the details I highlighted, the flow of the conversation—they were my voice.

Moral of the story

If you’re just starting out, or someone asked you, “I want to write a book, what do I do?”, wait a bit. Are you comfortable in your scenes, in your word choice? And…make sure the folks who do the critique are ones you trust.**

*Yes, I agree that passive voice, adverbs, filter words, etc., don’t have to be “mistakes.” But I DO maintain that if they’re not used purposefully, more often than not…they’re mistakes.
**Like industry pros.

Posted on March 20, 2012 in Crit Theory · Comments { 2 }