I don’t like to think of myself as doctrinaire about anything but certain ethical matters and perhaps the superiority of dark to milk chocolate. But I realize that I do have one unalterable rule that I wish I could also demand of others: When I teach a writing workshop, we must read published work on the grounds that, no matter how accomplished we may think ourselves to be, we need better writers in the room than even the best of us.
This anthology and the previous edition (only a few of whose stories are repeated here—it’s well worth having as a companion volume) present perfect examples of occasions for teaching and learning. Of course this collection will gratify even the casual reader, one who, like most moviegoers or opera aficionados, appreciates exceptional accomplishment without particularly caring how its effects are achieved. It is not a textbook. But its genesis as a response to the question put to hundreds of writers/teachers who also instruct by enthusiasm and example—Which stories do you assign, return to, find especially effective as models, stimuli, provocations?— makes it unusually useful for students in search of both inspiration and on-the-ground technical instruction.
After all, as I insist to my students, they will not always have teachers to guide them in that long future that awaits them after they’ve paid off their loans. Yes, assuming they continue to write, their work will be read, appreciated, and criticized by friends and—let’s hope—by editors and a world of readers. But before that, when they sit down to evaluate their own fiction, they need to be able, themselves, to interrogate and probe and poke and be skeptical, and so—back a step, before that—in the generative and then the writing stage, it would be hugely useful to be able to do the same to a body of the most celebrated work being published today. And not just to read critically: to read practically. To assemble a tool kit, or amass a set of skeleton keys that will open just about any door.
One of the more successful of the low-residency graduate writing programs even demands of its students that they make what are called “annotations” as they move through their studies; that is, they must choose a technical question they’d like to pursue and search in their reading for a variety of possible solutions. I still find myself doing exactly that, and I can’t imagine I’ll ever stop: Quite consciously, I’ll anatomize some aspect of a story or a novel, not to imitate it (although that’s a fine way to imbibe a given piece’s style and structure) but, admiring and curious, to see if I can figure out how an effect was achieved. I am talking about taking stories apart like watches, studying the kinds and sizes of the parts they contain, and the way those parts move and affect one another.
So, to mix metaphors (sample question: Can one do that?), what are the kinds of things an attentive reader might ask, either to follow a road or to break away from it and pave a new one? (All right: too many metaphors. Find your own.)
Everyone agrees that any story can be told in dozens of ways, though each makes it a different story. But for many student writers, first thought is assumed to be best thought. It usually isn’t. I begin again and again and again because my first thoughts are usually banal and verbally slack. What can we learn, then, by studying opening paragraphs word by word? The reader starts with no more of a preconception of what’s to come than the title might provide. If we think of ourselves as sleuths amassing clues—not yet about the large thematic questions, at the macro level, but, rather, at the micro level, where we are being led—we can learn what we need to by parsing who is speaking, and when, at what distance in time and space, in what kind of language and in what tone, on what occasion or for what reason at this particular time, before the significant action or after it . . . on and on and on. Often it turns out that the important dynamics of the story are all there already. So much is evident before a single page is turned that I have sometimes filled whole classroom hours talking, more fruitfully than one might guess, about the first hundred or so words. It takes patience to squeeze out of every syllable the effect it is intended to have on the innocent reader, but it is not an idle exercise. Try it (and also ask what would be different if the opening were constructed otherwise):
“We didn’t in the light; we didn’t in darkness. We didn’t in the fresh-cut summer grass or in the mounds of autumn leaves or on the snow where moonlight threw down our shadows.”
“At six Mr. Frendt comes on the P.A. and shouts ‘Welcome to Joysticks!’ ”
“Those are the offices and these are the cubicles. That’s my cubicle there, and this is your cubicle.”
These opening sentences are fraught with overtones and undertones; they are not doors to be sped through but, implicitly, plans for the entire building.
And the questions proliferate: What can we learn by studying the pace at which a story unfolds? How fast does it move? Is the speed of its deployment of detail consistent or does it contract and expand, rush forward, slow down, opening up from time to time like a climber coming to a level place and resting? How does the language hurry us along or slow us down? Does the plot seem to be taking place before our eyes or in retrospect, or in unreal—purely literary—time? What creates its intensity (if indeed it is intense)? The jam of words? [“Boys enter the house, boys enter the house. Boys, and with them the ideas of boys (ideas leaden, reductive, inflexible), enter the house.”] The elision of connectives? (Ditto.) The absence of detail or explication? (“At first he was just losing weight, he felt only a little ill, Max said to Ellen, and he didn’t call for an appointment with his doctor, according to Greg, because he was managing to keep on working at more or less the same rhythm, but he did stop smoking . . .”) a single sentence that ends far down the page, and while you’re there, consider the generality of the title.
A measured, deliberate opening can yield to great passion and mystery but so can an apparently casual one. (“Well, we had all these children out planting trees, see, because we figured that . . . that was part of their education” . . . and “Never marry a Mexican, my ma said once and always.”) How does the transition to something far less offhand take place? In stories as mad as George Saunders’s “Sea Oak” or Robert Olen Butler’s “Jealous Husband Returns in Form of Parrot,” how does the author fracture the conventional surface? Is there a refrain that returns and returns? (Melanie Rae Thon’s “ I’m your worst fear” or Jamaica Kincaid’s “this is how . . . this is how . . . this is how . . .”)
The questions, the contrasts—the possibilities—are almost infinite, but to read as a writer is to investigate them with an urgency different from that of the reader who might (or might not) take notice of an effect and move on. These are functional methods, available for us to pick up, turn over in our hands, weigh, and use.
And, finally, the bigger question and the most difficult: What makes almost every story here unique? What has all this technical expertise to do with the unreplicable intensity of stories—experiences—that are one of a kind? They are, after all, not clocks or watches, not simply cunningly calibrated machines. The only way I know how to say it is that, whatever they have chosen to be, they are consummately that. They are extreme. They proceed with the conviction that their means and ends are inseparable, and they take chances; they exaggerate, they make vivid their choices; they dominate us. To quote from my introduction to the first edition (yes, you can steal from yourself; I recommend it): “Where is the force of personality in (your story)? Do you convince us that this is the way it must be? You are an actor now: Inhabit your role. Fiction is not for the faint of heart.”
—ROSELLEN BROWN
ROSELLEN BROWN, novelist, short story writer, and poet, teaches at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.