Informing Your Manuscript, or, How to Use Your Friends and Strangers
I may be projecting, but I think it is common for writers to retreat into the worlds we're building and become insular in our thinking. This was true about myself, anyway. Over the last year and a half, however, I've definitely seen the benefit in looking outward for help in the writing process. In my completed ms, I'd written a mentally ill character. I was worried my portrayal wasn't accurate, so I asked a good friend who is a psychiatrist to read my manuscript. She gave the depiction of schizophrenia a thumbs up, but had some very interesting comments to make about the psychological state of some of the other characters. This experience prompted me to recruit readers with a wide variety of expertise. Another friend, a self-described redneck, was generous enough to read through and correct the hill country slang in my ms. He also made unexpected story contributions.
I am now working on a new ms. Having experienced the benefit of outside input, I have been in the business of interviewing experts to bolster the authenticity of my manuscript. What I've found is that people are only too happy to get a free lunch from a stranger and discuss what she's passionate about. I've met with a forensic anthropologist, medical entomologist, a parasitologist and a social worker. Each of the scientists invited me to her lab, and in the case of the forensic anthropologist, that means observing unidentified skeletal remains! (I am a major science dork, in case you can't tell.) I am hopeful I will get to meet with the city's medical examiner next.
While all of these conversations have improved my knowledge base, broadened my vocabulary, and made my story more real, the unexpected benefit has been the best of all - the gift of voice. All of these people are fascinating, and their demeanor, their words, their personalities, have informed my project. I now know I will always go through this process when shaping a story, even a non-technical piece. Interviews are fantastic creative spark producers.
In conclusion, as writers, we know we should have work critiqued by other writers, and peer review is hugely important. But what I've found is that input from experts can help bring your story to life, both early on through interviews and at the end, through manuscript critique. All you have to do is ask nicely and offer free food.
This is awesome, Carolyn. It sounds like you've been having some interesting lunches! I'm way too shy to approach strangers for research info, but maybe I'll get the guts eventually. This is very inspiring and encouraging. Love the advice to have them read the manuscript as well. Thanks!
Great tip! Thank you to Carolyn for sharing it, and to you, Casey, for bringing it to us. And congrats to Carolyn on her new agent!
ReplyDeleteMartina
Great tippage! She's gonna make a great agent.
ReplyDeleteOoh, good tip! I've asked friends and neighbors who have certain areas of expertise for input/information regarding certain elements of my ms, but I had no idea of how to go about approaching strangers. Thanks for the advice!
ReplyDeleteGreat tip Carolyn. Thanks. And congrats on your agent. That's awesome.
ReplyDeleteExcellent tip. Its the feeling of authenticity that makes the reader invest in the character. If the author hesitates, the reader will too. Better to get the right info from the right source when it really counts.
ReplyDeleteAngela @ The Bookshelf Muse
Great tip. I interview all the time. I work with tons of teenagers in my job and they are always more than willing to offer slang, their choice in different scenarios, and critiques. They definitely help you keep it real! Because keepin' it real can go wrong!
ReplyDeleteThis was a really inspiring tip! I do so many interviews for my journalistic writing, but never thought of the benefits of conducting them for more creative works. Thanks, Carolyn!
ReplyDeleteGreat tip, girlie! I completely agree with everything you posted!
ReplyDeleteI'm like you, Casey, too shy to approach strangers, and I wish I had Carolyn's pluck. This sounds like really great advice if I can only make myself take it. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for posting this, Casey! I'm glad people seemed to get something out of it. I'm in the thick of revision right now, and let me tell you, I'm missing the lunches with random strangers part of the process. :D
ReplyDeleteThanks for the tip, Carolyn. Opening ourselves to new experiences and people can only make us better writers. I haven't done this as much as you have, but any time I've approached someone I know with a question, they're thrilled to help me in writing my story!
ReplyDelete