I'll be back to regular A-Z posts later this week!
_____
Bringing the Personal to the Universal
Hardly a fantasy author alive has not heard her or his work referred to as "Tolkien-esque."
You know what I'm talking about, fellow writers! "Tolkien-esque" or the "next C.S. Lewis" or some strange combination thereof. These days, there might be a few new names thrown in for good measure. "An epic romance reminiscent of Twilight." Have you written one of those? Or how about "fun and magic on a par with Harry Potter"?
The fact is, as great a marketing ploy as these comparisons might be, they are often nothing short of embarrassing. I know I've cringed when I've seen my work declared "Tolkien-like." Huh? How are my allegorical fairy tales for teens anything like that VAST adult fantasy epic?
Or, because it contains allegorical threads, my work must be "similar to C.S. Lewis's Narnia." What? Allegory aside, how are my romantic/comedic full-length YA novels even remotely comparable to those short classics written for children?
Worst of all was a big banner in a magazine calling my work: "A Tolkien-esque fantasy for the Twilight audience."
(Insert tears here.)
"All that work!" I cry. "All those years of English major drudgery! All those carefully constructed literary themes! Shall I then be dismissed as a wanna-be copycat jumping on a popular bandwagon?"
So I take myself away to sulk about it for a while. When the sulking ends, however, I have to start thinking . . .
Great fiction is made up of themes: Love and longing, coming of age, voyage and return, fathers, sons, daughters, mothers, overcoming the monster, death, birth, and more. These are universals, themes that can be, on one level or another, understood by any man or woman. The fantasy genre is a place of extremes, thus these themes become even more dominant. The monsters to overcome are literal dragons or warlords. A maiden's love or a hero's longing means the binding of great alliances, the rise and fall of nations. Fathers are kings, sons are thieves, daughters are warrior maidens, and mothers are enchantresses. All these universals take on a proportion so much bolder than life that they become truly fantastic and unreal.
They can also start looking repetitive.
Because they drew us to fantasy in the first place, these extreme universals and archetypal characters are what we want both to write and to read. But in a sea of handsome Chosen Ones, feisty heroines, dark lords, and made-up names, how can our stories hope to stand out?
We must learn how to bring the personal to the universal.
My most brilliant plot-device, character arc, or surprise twist is never going to be original. Not on its own. All those universal themes have been done before and by better writers. But the one thing those authors (I'm talking to you Messrs Tolkien and Lewis!) can never bring to their work is . . . me.
Only I can do that.
The temptation, especially for young writers, is to ignore this. "After all," we tend to say, "what have I got that's interesting enough to live in the pages of epics? I'm too young. I'm too old. I'm too inexperienced. I'm too boring. That's why I write fantasy, to liven up my ordinary life!"
So we fall into clichés. We fall into cheesiness, writing about epic themes without the personal touch. We take ourselves very seriously and therefore lose credibility.
But I'm here today to argue that cheesiness and clichés need not be our fate! We can work with the brilliant, the epic, the universal themes so wonderful in the genre, but we can use our own experiences. For instance . . .
Did you ever have a first crush? For young and old, this is a pretty universal experience. But your personal experience of those first-time feelings--the sudden sense that maybe childhood perspectives on boys and girls are insufficient, that there might be more, that you might be more--is unique. Have you ever stopped to analyze that singular coming-of-age moment in your life?
Or how about this: Have you ever been assigned a task for which you felt inadequate? Babysitting three toddlers at once? Giving birth? Passing an algebra exam? Organizing a team that simply refuses to be organized? Ordinary experiences, to be sure, hardly the stuff of epics. And yet, the very real and very stressful feelings of your personal experience are universals that carry over to the world of danger, dragons, and dire deeds that is the fantasy genre.
These are basic examples. Yet they translate beautifully into themes everyone understands! And when I began recognizing this notion of the personal/universal, I first saw my own work take on life.
Like the heroine in Heartless, I have foolishly built dream-castles on a young man who didn't keep his promises. Like the hero in Veiled Rose, I've struggled to redefine my identity and lost myself in the process. Like the hero in Moonblood, I have thought I could earn my own redemption. Like the heroine in upcoming Starflower, I have experienced having no "voice" simply because I am a woman. Like the hero in my recent work-in-progress, I have experienced my human limitations--lack of beauty, lack of brains, lack of respect--and despaired in inadequacy.
Like my characters, I have sinned, I have stumbled, I have made a hash of my life. And I have been the recipient of undeserved grace!
My life experiences have been simple enough. A sheltered child, an ambitious student, a hard worker at various jobs, a friend, a sister, a daughter, a wife, an animal-fanatic . . . Nothing worthy of epics. I am not a brilliant Oxford don with war-time experience and decades of classical and theological education under my belt.
But I have faced my own dragons. I have seen my own kingdoms rise and fall.
So let this be my encouragement to you: Use these universal themes of love and longing, death and life, monsters and kings and Chosen Ones. Use them with excitement, knowing they will touch the hearts of your readers. But remember that your personal experience of these universals will bring the originality, the freshness your work needs. Don't make your heroes Aragorns or Harry Potters . . . make them you. Don't make your heroines Bella Swans or Lucy Pevensies . . . make them you.
For there has never been a “you” before now. Bring your personal to those classic universals, and you'll find you have something new. Yes, by pure virtue of being fantasy, it will be compared to Tolkien. But you will never be Tolkien. You will only be you.
And that, my friends, is true originality!
i couldn't help but think of this quote :):
ReplyDelete“Today you are You, that is truer than true. There is no one alive who is Youer than You.”
― Dr. Seuss, Happy Birthday to You!
<3 you're a great inspiration
That's a great quote! :) Thanks.
ReplyDeleteDearly, dearly as I love Tolkien and Lewis, I do appreciate that I am not them, and I do not write like them. And though I'm guilty of comparing you to Lewis, I also greatly appreciate the vast differences in story and writing style.
ReplyDeleteThe truth is, it's easy for me to tell friends, "This author's books have a strong allegory, like C.S. Lewis' novels." It's a quick, universal reference that might intrigue them. But if I want an extended conversation, I might tell them more about the Prince of Farthestshore and the Dragon Lord. I might talk about Una's endearing and well-done naiveté; I might bring in Rose Red, might mention Prince Lionheart. If I have time to go past a quick comparison, I will delight in telling my friends what makes you unique.
And it rekindles my own fire, so to speak. I skipped college; some days, I remember that Tolkien INVENTED LANGUAGES. And I skip writing my latest fantasy idea. And some days, I remember that I am no Tolkien. I am a me. And I do not need a new language to tell my stories. :)
It blesses me no end to read the appreciation for my work in your comment, Rachel6. And I am glad if this post helped reinspire you for your own fantasies as well. Enjoy the writing, and enjoy writing as only you can write.
ReplyDeleteI like this quote by Brenda Ueland:
"Besides, since you are like no other being ever created since the beginning of Time, you are incomparable.”
I love your books all on their own. I never compared them to the Narnia series (never read any of Tolkien either. To be truthful, fantasy was never my thin, until I read your series. LOVE THEM! Besides, its the "You" that makes them special and unique.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Eszter! It's SO nice to hear from a non-fantasy reader who still enjoys Goldstone Wood! I hope you will continue to love all the various characters and plot-twists I throw your way . . . :)
ReplyDeleteI loved this post! It was so inspiring and a great reminder...I do try so hard not to make it evident in my writing which author I was reading before I wrote a certain chapter. Have you ever accidentally "picked up" certain writing styles? :) By the way, when I tell friends about your series, they will sometimes ask, "are they like Lord of the Rings?" and I say, "No, she has a writing style all her own!" I love your way of writing!!! It pulls you in so well. :)
ReplyDelete