EBOOK

Novel Ideas

Contemporary Authors Share the Creative Process

Barbara Shoup
4
(1)
Pages
344
Year
2013
Language
English

About

Novel Ideas provides a substantial introduction to the elements of fiction followed by in-depth interviews with successful novelists who speak with candor and insight into the complex process by which a novel is made. This edition includes new and updated interviews as well as writing exercises to enhance its use in the writing classroom.

Dorothy Allison recalls "deliciously self-indulgent" days of writing in her bathrobe, wrapped in misery and exultation; Peter Cameron explains how he made the move from short fiction to the novel with the aid of a music composer's notebook to track the movement of his characters. Writers as different as Ha Jin, Jill McCorkle, Richard Ford, and Michael Chabon describe their unique approaches to their work while consistently affirming the necessity of committing to the hard effort of it while also remaining open to surprise.

Aspiring novelists will find hands-on strategies for beginning, working through, and revising a novel; accomplished novelists will discover new ways to solve the problems they face in process; and serious readers of contemporary fiction will enjoy a glimpse into the way novels are made.

Includes interviews with:
Dorothy Allison
Larry Brown
Peter Cameron
Michael Chabon
Michael Cunningham
Robb Forman Dew
Richard Ford
Ha Jin
Patricia Henley
Charles Johnson
Wally Lamb
Valerie Martin
Jill McCorkle
Sena Jeter Naslund
Lewis Nordan
Sheri Reynolds
S. J. Rozan
Jane Smiley
Lee Smith
Theodore Weesner.

Related Subjects

Reviews

"Novel Ideas is the real thing: the editors offer an excellent crash course on how to write a novel, and the contemporary novelists they interview offer advice, insight, consolation, inspiration, and (above all) stories about stories. I can't imagine a writer who wouldn't find this book useful, or a reader who wouldn't find it stimulating and provocative."
Robert Hellenga, author of The Italian Lover
"I love the stark contrasts. . . . Major is . . . someone with . . . a vivid sense of how narrative and impulse inhabit the visual realm."
Elizabeth Stuckey-French, coauthor of Writing Fiction: A Guide to Narrative Craft
"Many texts exist on writing the short story, but there are few useful ones about its less predictable cousin, the novel. This valuable book includes general fiction principles but then expands to the particular testimony of contemporary authors discussing how they wrote their well-known novels. The result for readers, writers, and writing teachers is not a cookbook but a bountiful literary feast.
Doris Betts, author of Heading West

Artists