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James W. Morris's avatar

I wrote a story once about a man and a woman who were attracted to each other, using sections with alternating viewpoints. When it was finished, I wasn’t completely happy with it, but I couldn’t have said why. After abandoning the story for a while, it occurred to me suddenly (I hadn’t realized I’d been subconsciously considering the issue) that I liked the woman, but not the man—she was funny and smart, and he was just kinda snarky and meh. I took him out and rewrote the story from just her POV. It sold right away and was later anthologized.

I think the mistake I made was being too loyal to the form I initially decided to use. The characters didn’t like it.

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mary g.'s avatar

If you don't mind, I'd like to say this to the questioner: Keep going. Keep starting over. You are eventually going to get there. I started writing fiction in my early twenties. I had no idea what I was doing. There was no internet, no George. I didn't know where to go to take a course. But for some reason, I really, really wanted to write at least one decent short story. It meant everything to me. I didn't write that one decent short story until I was 44 years old. You do the math. That's how long it might take to figure this thing out. I hope that's not a depressing thought! What I'm trying to tell you is that you are on the path, and it may take a while. Just don't quit.

George talks a lot here in his post about revising, and maybe that's what you want to do with all the words and stories you've put on paper. If so, have at it. I'm going to offer another idea: Start at new story. But THIS time, tell yourself that the entire point of writing this new story is to write a STORY. Which means, a story that meets some of the conventions of storytelling so that when you pass along your completed draft to someone to read they recognize it for what it is. A story, like in the good old days, around the campfire. Don't worry if it's good writing or not! Don't worry if it goes out of whack as long as it comes back again. Just write a story that works. Use those conventions that no one wants to talk about because they seem so conventional. They work for a reason.

Okay, so now you may ask, well mary g. how do i write that story that works? You can do several things. You can read a story, and then use that story as a jumping off point. For instance, we have read the story The Stone Boy here. In that story, a terrible accident occurs. You can steal that idea. A terrible accident occurs, a person is shunned for it, in the end there is some kind of reconciliation. There--that's a story you can write. I'm not saying you should write all of your stories like this. I'm saying this is an exercise in finishing a story that works.

Remember that many, many stories are all about a character who wants something. Give your character something to want—a problem to solve, an accident to get out of, a bad deed they want to hide, a haircut in time for their wedding. Put your character through their paces. Eventually, as you squeeze your character into a corner, something’s gonna have to give. They’re going to have to make a character-defining decision. That’s their opportunity for change, to take or leave.

All of this is convention. But all of it could lead to a nice story that works. And then you can look at that story that you wrote that works and learn from it. Eventually you won't have to think about conventions--they will be buried in your brain; you'll use them in an automatic way instead of having them sit on the surface.

As to whether or not I've ever given up on a story. I've given up on all those stories that turned out to not be stories. Thousands of words of me expressing myself. But none of them stories. I think that's why it took me so long to get published. As soon as I began to understand what a story is, things started happening for me.

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