Should Writing Teachers Suggest Students Abandon a Book?
By happenstance, I was in a folder of old blog files, and I
found this piece that I wrote nearly 7 years ago…and thought, but I’m still
pondering this question! So I did a couple of updates, and here we go…and, as
noted, I’ve been pondering this question for a long time, so if you’re a
current student of mine, please don’t freak out and imagine that I’m talking
specifically about you and your work.
My question: Can—should—I as a teacher tell a student
not to write about a certain topic?
I don’t mean out of a fear that a topic is taboo in society
(ha, if anything is anymore) or because I personally don’t care for stories
about family vacations. I also don’t mean the blanket statements that you find
on the syllabi of many beleaguered undergrad creative writing teachers: “No
vampires, no ghosts, no gnomes, no protagonist suicides to end the story.”
There are several different times that trigger this question
in my mind. First would be a story that (I’m guessing, but I know it’s a good
guess) is very close personally to the student’s life in some way, but that’s a
topic that is terribly overdone and hard to make fresh: an adult thinking back
on his parents’ divorce, say, or two sisters cleaning out the house of their
dead mother and discovering a so-called life-changing secret. Obviously there
are always ways to make these stories interesting, but the student isn’t
finding those ways (despite my excellent teaching skills, haha). Or maybe the
student is a good writer—the skill is there—but the story itself is just plain dull.
And is there a difference if by “story” what I mean is “novel-in-progress”? It’s
one thing to work for several weeks on a 15-page story that’s trite, but a far
different picture if the student is setting forth on a years-long journey to
complete a novel that’s trite.
On the other hand…do I really know with absolute certainty that this book will “never” get
published? Is that the only goal for a writer? It shouldn’t be, though it seems
that most students state that this IS their goal, of course. I wrote some
novels that didn’t get published and learned quite a bit about writing from the
experience. Wasn’t that enough? What would I have done if someone told me the
stories were trite? Honestly, I’m pretty sure that wasn’t the exact flaw of
these particular works, but someone surely could have pointed out many other
gigantic flaws during the process. Would I have listened? Would I have wanted
to hear that? Would that have been helpful?
In these situations, I often focus my teacher comments on
ways to deepen the story and find more complexity, look at the hard parts of
the story the writer is leaving unmined. When the story is too personal, that
approach can be a problem, as the student writer may not want to discover (via
a writing workshop) that, OMG, my relationship with my father is more
challenged than I realized! They like their simplistic story as is, because
that’s the story in their head. In real life that’s fine(ish), but not on the
page. Is it my job to assist a student toward writing a dull, simple novel that
(I know) will never be published? Is that a good day at the office for me?
Another tricky time that makes me wonder about whether I
should tell a student to choose another topic is when the student is turning in
competent stories about, oh, married couples in Washington, D.C., but I happen
to know that in real life this person has an amazing past of some sort that
would provide material that I, as a writer, would KILL to have access to. When
I mention this interesting other stuff they might write about, there’s usually
a response along the lines of, “Oh, I don’t think so,” and sometimes, “I would
never write about that,” or the the full stop: “Not while my mother is still
alive.” I always murmur some sort of encouraging something and say, “Maybe
someday you’ll be ready for that” and reiterate that I, personally, think that stuff
would make an AMAZING book or story, and we go back to the competent stories. While
I harbor hope that someday they’ll be ready and that I’ve planted a seed, I’m
still sort of sad watching them struggle away, mired in competency, when they
could soar.
And what about the student who isn’t a very skilled writer
(yet) who is determined to tackle a giant subject—sometimes personal—that he/she
just isn’t able to handle right now? I long to say, “Can’t you practice writing
on a smaller canvas for a little while? You’re not Tolstoy (yet).” On the other
hand, none of us are, and what’s the harm? I think a lot about this one while
I’m writing up critiques that focus on first level things—commas, details,
characterization—when on a smaller canvas, this same poor writer could also
start learning about bigger issues like structure and conflict that would
better serve the writer-in-training.
Now, I also keep an eye out for a writer who is tackling a
story that’s perhaps not theirs to tell (ahem, American Dirt < https://www.vulture.com/2020/01/american-dirt-book-controversy-explained.html>).
But even this situation makes me uncomfortable, as no one technically “owns” a
story, so instead I bring up the complications in choosing to write about an
experience well beyond one’s real-life parameters and outline the literary
culture’s current response to such projects and suggest the publishing pitfalls
that may be ahead and offer excellent resources like Alexander Chee’s response
to the question “Do you have any advice for writing about people who do not
look like you?” <https://www.vulture.com/2019/10/author-alexander-chee-on-his-advice-to-writers.html>.
But should I tell this student NOT to write American Dirt?
Our culture is so bound and determined not to harbor any
quitters…is this why students feel that need to plow through these novels that
aren’t working? Is there no way to bow
gracefully and admit defeat? To step back and gather new resources before
returning into the fray? To pause, instead of constantly plow forward? And yet,
I’ve said it to classes a thousand times: Writing a novel is a
marathon…sometimes you don’t feel like writing, but you just have
to…persistence will triumph over raw talent. Blah, blah, blah. I know I even
use the word “plow.” Often.
I remember meeting a very accomplished writer who told me
about a time in her MFA days when she had been struggling for months on a
novel, bringing in chapters to workshop, and finally her instructor spoke with
her privately and said, “You know, you just shouldn’t be writing that. It’s not
a novel.”
“Wow,” I said. “That must have been hard to hear.”
The accomplished writer said, “Actually, it was very useful
to hear. I stopped writing that novel and wrote something else instead.”
Could it be that simple?