how to write a novel in one easy step
The small boy with the cold feet, the sopping mittens and the empty belly walked with me, or resisted walking, through the abandoned woodlot. He was an adorable litany.
I DON’T WANNA WALK ANYMORE
ARE WE THERE YET
and then making-like-siren WAAAAAGGGGHH
With an hour of walking still ahead of us, I resorted to the only thing that might work. A juicy threat.
Hey Eric, I whispered. Not so loud.
He looked up at me, puzzled.
We don’t want them to hear us, because, you know, we’d be totally crushed.
Our feet crunched companionably over leaf rot, sank into ruts of half-frozen mud, stumbled over fallen branches. After a moment of consideration during which I could hear the click and whirr of his brain, his breath escaped in a cloud that hung in the air around his face.
Who?
Around us were trees, gnarly; trees, stunted; trees, knocked down; and trees, tangled. And a silence that needed occupation.
And so I said the pirates.
The story gobbled up the hour in telling, the sum of all things giant and roaring and rude and wily. There were disguises and fiery tempers and lady-barbarians and duct tape (naturally, for every good yarn needs a jury-rigger). And none paused for scruples, and there was a mission, and an insatiable hunger, and a pit that stank and sloshed, and an explosion one Saturday morning, unexpected as explosions tend to be, as an old man knelt in mud just like this to pull weeds from his tomato patch.
Eric walked without complaint as he listened, interjecting every now and then to question me on some finer point of pursuit or repulsion. Finally the woods turned to fields and we were back at his family’s farm, smoke chugging in welcome from out the top of the stovepipe.
With a nine-month-old Evan snoring in the backpack, the bunch of us walked past the peacock hut, through the yard filled with beady-eyed goats who never fail to tell you just what they think of you. Past the weathered barn, through the door with the wooden latch and into the wall of heat that radiated from an antique kitchen wood oven, their hearth of iron. We bake in it, Eric’s dad told me. Takes some experimenting at first, but why not?
After warming up we piled into the car for the drive back to the coast. And I couldn’t stop thinking quick, write that down, because that was kind of fun and so I did, bare scratchings of shape and setting.
For a year or so characters clamoured out of turn, demanding inclusion. A voice would say I’m bored, let’s have a chase or What do they eat? I wanna know what they eat or It has to start with the spy and I would reply But there aren’t any spies in this story and the something would chuckle and say Oh yes there are.
Scenes were remote camps isolated from one another by hundreds of miles of impenetrable wilderness. Piece by piece a great railway was built to link them, and then there were elections, and slurpees, and all-nite pharmacies, and lo! A country was made, as a story was written by filling up the spaces in between.
Then I got pregnant with identical twins, and they were born too early, and one of them died, and for a while, the only pirates in my life wore scrubs.
+++
Maybe it’s best to not have high-falootin’ goals. Maybe it’s best to engage in dogged tinkering without too much conscious thought.
Maybe it’s best to just take the goalie out of the net and have sex as opposed to sitting at the kitchen table on a Tuesday and saying Let’s Never See Another Movie Ever Again, and While We’re At It, Autonomous Social Engagements and Adult Conversations are Highly Over-Rated, and so is Sleep, and Disposable Income, and so Let’s Conceive Children, and Hey Guess What, My Mommy Bits Are Ripe, and Please to Insert.
Because if I had sat at the kitchen table on a Tuesday and said Hey, I Could Write a Book, You Know, A Novel Or Somesuch, and Hey, Maybe I Could Get It Into, You Know, Stores and Stuff, and By The Way, Does Anyone Know How To Write A Novel?
—I wouldn’t have even attempted foreplay.
+++
On a related note, a psychic spoiler follows. Here is my first book review, and so I shrug, adopt an indifferent posture and reach for a cold beer.
...A jotting-down of random inventions joined together with what appears to be duct-tape by an author who appears to know nothing of authoring. Final word: Bizarre, unstudied.
To clarify: the only critic so far is the future-heckler in my imagination, who quipped the above between yawns. I keep her hog-tied in the shed at the back of my brain.
Hardly anyone has read the book, except for the publisher—there's my mom (incoherent joyful sobbing), my dad ("Margaret Atwood is cowering already!"), my husband ("Umm.. neat!"), the grand madame of the best kids' bookstore in the entire country ("Keep at it...") and a teacher-friend and kid-shepard who twittered what I guess is, technically, the first review ("I just switched teams. Fuck ninjas. Pirates got it going on.")
Monday, February 16, 2009 in
the next gestation,
writing










Reader Comments (49)
Kate, Kate. Fairy Kate.
Sprinkles her dust over words and makes
something each and every time
that seems to us quite sublime!
Hang tough, drink beer, have sex. See where the story goes.
(and if yours can make it, maybe, just maybe my bookstore minder with his oatmeal might see the light of day...just maybe...)
what happens?
I'm still buying the book and reading it with my kids, critics be damned.
I'm relatively new to your blog and just love it. Thank you.
and i got this little butterfly in my stomach thinking about what wonderful childrens books you could make
thinking about the illustrations in them
thinking about my future pirate, late at night, reading with him in bed, his imagination running wild...
and other books with your name on the cover, about bears with their mouth stained from black berries..
...and then i continued reading.
AND OH MY FREAKING GOD i jumped.
because SERIOUSLY?!
my butterflies are flapping away in my belly...my mind is racing about how i can get my hands on a BOOK, hardcover, with words from your imagination printed upon the pages... and how one day i will be able to read them over and over and over again--from memory to a little pirate or fairy..
le sigh.
and now my belly feels all nice and full with the idea... like i just drank a big mug of hot chocolate and all is good in the world.
i cannot wait!!!
i would still beg you to write them--these stories in books.
KATE!!
you have me all in jitters tonight! :)
I had a published author as my seventh-grade homeroom teacher. I walked in awe of her; there is something "other" about anyone who can take a random idea and turn it into something tangible they can share.
Keep up the amazing work, and thank you for sharing so much of yourself with so many of us.
Can't wait to hear how it goes.
I would be so excited to read anything that you've written (especially if it has pirates in it?!!). Will have this preordered the very second it comes out!
Also, I'm feverishly taking notes, here. "How to write a novel in one, e-a-s-y..."
I'm sure Kelly and Laura are thinking...NOOOOO! Not a novel! It's already toooo looooong, Emily!
I can't wait, Kate. I really can't.
Your critic is just insanely jealous. :)
xoxo
xo
...and thank you so much everyone.... ditto to mom's party suggestion. I'll bring the lobster, because I'm the kind of vegetarian that doesn't make you eat tofu salad. even though you'd LOVE it. really. you would.
i love it already. and i can't wait to get my own copy!
congrats again on your dream! you are such a pleasure to read.
You are just the bestest example of how fun writing can be. I can't WAIT to read it.
Love
Rae
everytime i read your blog i just sigh. its amazing. i love your way. the comments are also hysterical- almost intimidating to post one up myself!!
can't wait for your book!
xo
Lani
ANYWAY, I'm currently reading Wizard of Oz to Vivian ti prepare her for this. :) Cannot WAIT. We should have a wine and ninja party....
You know how you said somewhere else that you don't read anything from the outside when you want to write better? I am the opposite. I read you.
(I saw BHJ's tweet and felt very jealous. Please for me to read your book?)
That said, I'm a damn good editor. Lemme know if it needs a read!
and SUBLIME!