Visiting the edge of experience
Many people were surprised I wanted to go on "the Manhire course" as it's been known - the creative writing class at Victoria University - because I’d already had several
novels and other books published. Why would an established
author need writing lessons? they asked. There were indeed some things I thought
I could do well enough already, like structure and plot and character and
dialogue.
Lesson Number 1: You
can always do a lot better.
Lesson Number 2: You're never too old to learn.
There were revelations I never expected, such as the discovery of a literary genre I’d never heard of, and
probably won’t bother to explore again: transgressive fiction. I now know it
covers graphic exploration of aberrant sexual practices and mutilation –
visiting the edge of experience, someone called it. I’m amazed that I managed
to read it all without throwing up. Ironically, one of the three beautiful
young women in the class came up with that one and it was a matter of principle
not to seem old school about “visiting the edge of experience”. That is, after
all, why I wanted to go on the course in the first place.
What did I learn about writing?
Here are some of the key things I learned:
- How to recognise clichés and, for the most part, lose them
- How to stop over-explaining and running on, and accept that less is more
- Severely prune adverbs (I don’t think I could ever drop them entirely – there are two in this list already)
- Dialogue doesn’t have to follow on – people often don’t answer a question or say the logical next thing
- Writing what you know is safe. Sometimes you have to go outside the boundaries and “visit the edge of experience” – though preferably not through transgressive fiction!
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