It’s time for another group posting of the Insecure Writer’s Support Group! Time to release our fears to the world or offer encouragement to those who are feeling neurotic. If you’d like to join us, click on the tab above and sign up. We post on the first Wednesday of every month. Every month, the organizers announce a question that members can answer in their IWSG Day post. Remember, the question is optional!!! Let’s rock the neurotic writing world! Our Twitter handle is @TheIWSG, and the hashtag is #IWSG.
This month’s question: What do you consider the best characteristics of your favorite genre?
Whittling it down to just one is a hard ask. My favourite genre is the one I write, fantasy fiction for middle-grade children. I remember in one of the writing courses I took twenty-odd years ago, the tutor exhorted us to do as Thoreau once said, to “know thy bone.” In other words, to circle your preoccupations, recurring motifs, to explore your particular palette, “bury it, dig it up, sniff it, gnaw on it” – know thy bone. Thankfully, many years ago, I discovered the right genre for me, and I’ve been circling it ever since, figuring out how to say what I want to say. The tutor advised us to “immerse ourselves in the genre” by reading as well. I don’t need any encouragement! This is why I write and read my favourite genre.
What is the best characteristic? Gee, still hard…
To make things easier, I might break the answer into two parts. Let’s start with the age group, middle-grade, or children between the ages of eight and twelve. This stage of life is magical because kids are strong enough to be somewhat independent while still being young enough to be starry-eyed. They are not too old for enchantment. Ava Duvernay said of this age group that ‘it is a time to discover who we are in our minds and our hearts. A time to listen and learn and think and wonder. A time to start to decide for ourselves how we want to walk through this world.’ That’s powerful stuff, right there.
Middle grade is a great age group to write for. The first time I ever saw Kate de Goldi speak in public was when she gave a keynote address at the Spinning Gold Children’s Writer’s Conference in 2009. Every point Kate made hit home when she spoke of why she chose to write Middle Fiction. “I don’t write about or for children, but I write for the once and always child in myself,” Kate said. “When I’m writing for children, I’m chasing down a lost Eden, that hopeful springtime, approximating the pleasure I had in those shaded places. The lost Eden of my childhood.”
Thank you for putting it into words, Kate. I am ever seeking to evoke the bewitching, magical heaven of my idyllic childhood when the joy of reading took hold of my heart and soul.
There is a deep secret fascination with that time of my life. In the years 8 – 12, I was an independent thinker, and I believed in the possibility of magical things, like leprechauns, tooth fairies, unicorns, and Santa Claus. When I was on a writing course with Kate de Goldi once, Kate told us, “Inside, I’m always twelve.” And I am the same. I feel I haven’t lost touch yet with my young life. The inner child who never stopped believing in the possibilities.
Middle Grade is a cool audience. They’re not reading with a sentimental nod back to those days when we used to believe in dragons; these readers can still be thrilled by the idea that such things might exist and aren’t afraid to let their imaginations run wild with it. I love that.
The fantasy fiction part of the genre is an equally important part of my bone. I started as a young reader of fairy tale anthologies, myths, and legends, Hans Christian Andersen, C.S.Lewis and Enid Blyton, and Tove Janssen. It was not that my life was something I sought to escape from as a child, but rather that fantasy fiction was so vivid, such a thrilling place to escape to. As Neil Gaiman said at last year’s writer’s festival, “Fiction can show you a different world. It can take you somewhere you’ve never been.” And that’s exciting.
Why do I write it? The common thinking about our draw towards fantasy fiction is that it’s about ‘fulfilling the heart’s desire.’ This usually means our longing for a better world, a better self, and a better life. I relate to that completely. They say that ‘Fantasy seeks to heal the wasteland.’ Almost every story aims towards the ultimate wish fulfillment, where everything works towards the greater good – the wasteland healed.
Saving the world is the deeper, philosophical view. I also write fantasy fiction because that’s what I read as a child. And, it keeps my inner child happy. Keeps hope alive. Feeds my sense of wonder. And, I gotta tell you, it is rewarding to learn how to trust my style, my voice, my way of adding another carrot to the stewpot. I adore my bone. It’s satisfying to bury, dig it up, sniff it, and give a good gnaw, before burying it again ready for the next time. It somehow feeds my soul, gnawing my bone.
Many people still look down their noses at the fantasy fiction genre. But, I love it. What’s wrong with that? What the heck is wrong with escapist literature?
I appreciated what Neil Gaiman said on this subject. “I hear the term bandied about as if it’s a bad thing. As if “escapist” fiction is a cheap opiate used by the muddled and the foolish and the deluded, and the only fiction that is worthy, for adults or children, is mimetic, mirroring the worst of the world the reader finds themself in.” I don’t get the prejudice. When the world outside my door appears to be on fire, why wouldn’t I escape to a fabulous place which is not on fire, where fantastic things are happening? Writing (and reading) fantasy fiction is a constant spirit lifter. And, I highly recommend it.
What do you consider the best characteristics of your favorite genre?
Keep Writing!
Yvette Carol
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When she is most lucky, the poet sees things as if for the first time, in their original radiance or darkness; a child does this too, for he has no choice. ~ Edwin Muir
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Thank you Yvette for your uplifting post. My inner 5 and 15 selves are jumping with joy.
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My pleasure, Susan. And, it’s nice to see you back! LOL. I think I have a 15-year-old in there, too. 🙂
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I so agree with Neil Gaiman. I’ve read a few of his books too.
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Gaiman says it like it is, which I really appreciate. We read his Norse Mythology last year and loved it. We also bought his American Gods at the same time. But, before I could get started on reading it with my 20-year-old special needs son, someone warned me that the content might not exactly be appropriate so that one still languishes on the bookshelf. I want to read his Graveyard book next.
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American Gods is one I do have.
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Aha! Everyone seems to have a copy. Maybe I’ll just have to read it on my own without reading it to my son.
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Fairy tales, myths, and legends were some of my favorite reading genres long before I started writing.
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Yes! The first book my parents ever gave me was The Legend of Siegfried. I read that book again and again. That started me off.
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Sounds like you’ve found a lot of inspiration and know your path well! That’s awesome.
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Only being held back by lack of imagination. 🙂
Anna from elements of emaginette
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Sometimes I have to remind myself that it’s not coming from me but somewhere else. That helps!
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I remember early on in my writing journey, people kept telling me to experiment with multiple genres, because if I start off my career writing one and only one genre, I might be stuck writing that one genre for the rest of my life. Whenever someone would tell me this, my thought was always “Is that a bad thing?”
I read lots of different things, but I’ve only ever wanted to write science fiction. I guess that’s “my bone.”
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Your bone is your bone and there’s no need to apologize for it. That’s what I tell myself anyway. I’ve been looked down on for years for writing fantasy. When I first started out, people (even an agent) told me, “Nobody reads fantasy fiction!” I had to learn to give myself permission to write it regardless!
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Nobody reads fantasy fiction? What an absolutely bizarre take, especially from an agent. Why do book stores waste valuable floor space on something nobody reads?
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Exactly!
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Thrillers have always caught my interest even before I thought about writing! Thank you for sharing this beautiful post, Yvette 🙂
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Thanks, Damyanti. I appreciate the feedback. If you are not writing thrillers, I encourage you to try. 🙂
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Nice post Yvette
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Thanks, Vivienne!
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I’ve always liked fantasy and fiction because it allows the author to construct a world and use it to explore a theme. For instance racism in the wizard ing world of Harry Potter, or how power corrupts in Brandon Sanderson’s The Reckoners series. And I agree, I don’t see anything wrong with escapism.
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Yes, exactly. The world is so touchy about everything these days that I find it safer to explore ideas in the world of fantasy, where I can’t tread on any toes.
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