Thursday 21 February 2013

What is left unsaid




This week we’ve had a high and a low in the Guyler household – my first press interview with the fabulous journalist Charlie Ray who wrote a wonderful article about me here
What fascinated me when the article came out was what he didn’t put in, bearing in mind after our meeting he commented on the pages and pages of notes he’d taken, proving I can talk for England . . .

The low came when the family hamster died suddenly. At his funeral youngest son asked us all to say a few words but his tears spoke more eloquently than anything any of us said.

Half the difficulty with revising a first draft manuscript is deciding what words shouldn’t stay, those that don’t add to the story and will harm it by leaving them in there are usually fair game. A reader doesn’t want to know what the characters do for every second they’re in their skin - I’ve read, and skipped through, books where the author spells out everything the protagonist wears and even eats, get on with the story already! But those words that simplify and strengthen the tale through the act of taking them out are much harder to recognise.

Stephen King in his excellent On Writing writing memoir shared a scribbled comment he received on a rejection that

‘changed the way I rewrote my fiction once and forever. Jotted below the machine-generated signature of the editor was this mot: “Not bad, but PUFFY. You need to revise for length. Formula: 2nd Draft = 1st Draft – 10%.’

Deciding on the less obvious words that should fall in that 10%, that’s the trick.