Cover image for A Kite in the Wind : Fiction Writers on Their Craft.
A Kite in the Wind : Fiction Writers on Their Craft.
Title:
A Kite in the Wind : Fiction Writers on Their Craft.
Author:
Barrett, Andrea.
ISBN:
9781595341075
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (295 pages)
Contents:
Contents -- Introduction -- Part 1 Narrative Distance and Narrative Voice -- The Author-Narrator-Character Merge: Why Many First-Time Novelists Wind Up with Flat, Uninteresting Protagonists -- Self-Awareness and Self-Deception: Beyond the Unreliable Narrator -- The Truthless Narrator -- First Person: Finding the Right Address -- Comic and Cosmic Distance -- Part 2 Revealing Character -- In the Garden: Revealing a Character at a Moment of Change -- The Space Between -- The Literature of Delusion: Approaches to Madness and Mania in Fiction -- The Absence of Their Presence: Mythic Character in Fiction -- Emblem, Essence -- Part 3 Seeing and Setting -- "It's a Wooden Leg First": On the Nature of Seeing in Fiction -- Matrix for Meaning: Physical Setting in Cormac McCarthy's Blood Meridian -- Some Reflections on the Concept of Place in Fiction -- The Heart One Knows by Heart: Operating Instructions for Operating Instructions -- Part 5 Pattern and Shape -- Size Matters -- Puzzles, Mysteries, and Other Problems -- or, The Seven Bridges of Königsberg -- The Breakout Element: Unpredictability and the Novel -- Lush Life -- On Suspense, Shower Murders, the Sword of Damocles, and Shooting People on the Beach -- The About-to-Be Moment: Imminence in the Grimm Fairy Tales -- Contributors -- Credits.
Abstract:
A Kite in the Wind is an anthology of essays by 20 veteran writers and master teachers. While the contributors offer specific, practical advice on such fundamental aspects of craft as characterization, character names, the first person point of view, and unreliable narrators, they also give extended, thoughtful consideration to more sophisticated topics, including “imminence," or the power of a sense of beginning; creating and maintaining tension; “lushness"; and the deliberate manipulation of information to create particular effects. The essays in A Kite in the Wind begin as personal investigations — attempts to understand why a decision in a particular story or novel seemed unsuccessful; to define a quality or problem that seemed either unrecognized or unsatisfactorily defined; to understand what, despite years of experience as a fiction writer, resisted comprehension; and to pursue haunting, even unanswerable questions. Unlike a how-to book, the anthology is less an instruction manual than it is an intimate visit with twenty very different writers as they explore topics that excite, intrigue, and even puzzle them. Each discussion uses specific examples and illustrations, including both canonical stories and novels and writing less frequently discussed, from the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries, by both American and international authors. The contributors share their hard-earned insights for beginning and advanced writers with humility, wit, and compassion. The first section of the book focuses on narration, with particular attention paid to various kinds of narrators; the second, on strategic creation and presentation of character; the third, on some of the roles of the visual, beginning with establishing setting; and the fourth, on structural and organizational issues, from movement through time to the manipulation of information to create

mystery and suspense.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Subject Term:
Added Author:
Electronic Access:
Click to View
Holds: Copies: