Better Story Telling = Writing + Reading2
Just as deep space travel depends on the relationship of energy to the mass of an object times the speed of light squared (e=mc2
for all those not familiar with Einstein's theory of relativity), being
a great writer also depends on universal principles. In fact, the
difference between a hobby writer and a great story teller is very
similar to the difference between an amateur astronomer and, say,
Galileo Galilei. One enjoys spending a couple of hours a week using his
instrument to scan the sky and, occasionally, happens upon something
interesting. The other completely immerses himself in his field,
applying what he already knows to come up with new ideas that completely
change how we think about ourselves and our universe.
Nicolas
Copernicus studied the pioneering works of Aristarchus before
developing his own revolutionary views on heliocentrism. Isaac Newton
often pondered the moon's orbit around the Earth while gazing from his
bedroom window at apples falling from a tree in his mother's garden
(contrary to so many cartoon stories, he was not struck in the head). In
fiction, Doctor Victor Frankenstein pored through books, spending years
in laboratory research before assembling his fateful beast.
The
point is this: in order to be better writers, we need to be better
readers. That means reading...a lot! A couple of years ago, I sat down
at my computer with a burning desire to write science fiction. Needless
to say, I'm still trying to finish the same story. I realized one of my
biggest obstacles was the fact I was trying to write science fiction,
but it had been years since I had actually read any science fiction. I
was out of practice, out of vocabulary, out of style, out of research,
out of context. I was trying to write the science fiction I remembered
as a kid without realizing that science fiction had progressed and
surpassed everything I remembered.
When the year 2012 rolled around, I made a commitment to myself and to my
writing. I made a list of books I wanted to read and used the
opportunity to study the craft of published writers in
my genre. I wanted to learn how they wrote, how they captured my
imagination, how they allowed me to visualize the worlds they created,
how they made me keep turning pages long into the night when I should have been
sleeping, how they expressed the messages they felt needed to be told
about humanity and the fate of our world.
My
goal was twelve books, one for each month, with a promise that I would
learn from the best and the worst. Even if I didn't like a book, I would
read it anyway to learn why I didn't like it, making mental
notes about what worked and--just as importantly--what didn't, so I
wouldn't make the same mistakes.
So
the key to good writing is good reading and reading a lot, which is why
reading gets an exponential square in the equation above. When I dedicated myself to my reading and to my writing, I found that I had more time than I thought. After just the first quarter of the year, I had already read my twelve
novels for the entire year. Here was the list:
Foundation's Edge by Isaac Asimov
House of the Scorpion by Nancy Farmer
The Atlantis Code by Charles Brokaw
Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury
Changelings by Anne McCaffrey
Childhood's End by Arthur C. Clarke
A Stranger in a Strange Land by Robert Heinlein
The Bradbury Report by Steven Polansky
War of the Worlds by HG Wells
Frankenstein by Mary Shelley
Daniel X by James Patterson
The Maze Runner by James Dashner
Granted,
most of these were in audiobook format during my daily commute to and
from work. But the format doesn't matter. And I didn't stop with just twelve either. I've discovered that listening to audio books is by far
preferable to hearing Adele or P!nk or Taylor Swift sing for the bazillionth time about lost love. Think about it, how many times can you really hear the same song
over and over again before you tire of hearing it? And I don't miss
any of the talk or commercials on the radio.
It
was Isaac Newton who once said, "If I have seen further it is because I
have stood on the shoulders of giants." The important thing is to read a
lot and learn from the masters how to construct a compelling story.
Read a lot and write a lot and little by little your writing will
improve until, one day, you can see further because the high road on
which you travelled was paved by those who came before you. Happy
reading!
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