...my publisher asked me, and it wasn't a loaded question.
'Because I want to tell stories', I answered and while I said it I realized there was something wrong. It isn't that I don't want to tell stories no, the statement I made was correct. Very much so. Telling stories is probably what I like best about writing. Once the pen starts to move I am able to tell things that I didn't know I had in me to tell. I am not much of a talker, I need the isolation to get me started. Writing is a way to open up a part of myself that would otherwise go largely unnoticed. So that wasn't it. If there was something wrong, then it had to be something else.
It may have been the ease with which I said it, too eager to say what I always say. There is nothing wrong with that, except that my publisher was talking shop and he expected me to do the same. As I gave my answer, I realized that I wasn't responding to his question in kind. He asked me why I write to find a way into the story of my next book. I had sent him a one page synopsis, which he liked, but he thinks the story has more potential than I may get out of it if I go about writing it in the way I am used to.
Does this make sense?
It does. You see, my stories tend to happen. They are good stories (most of the time), they are pretty well written (most of the time), they have a good plot, or at least an interesting one, the characters are okay, there is always some of the unexpected to keep the reader on his toes, but... they happen.
'Why do you write?' my publisher asked me and what he wanted to know was: what lies beyond the happening of my stories? He is convinced there is something there.
There is, but at the same time he is asking about something that lies beyond my visual reach. I know what he is talking about, I recognize it, but I can't see it. I can't reach out, grab it, pull it towards me and look at it.
'Don't you think there is a way to make it more personal?' he asked.
That is what he means.
Why do I write? To have stories happen or to load stories with something that hits the reader in the chest? My publisher is saying that I will never hit my readers in the chest as long as my stories just happen.
And it isn't a trick, a specific writing technique that I can learn, pick up or copy from someone else. 'Why do you write?' It is such a simple question. And the answer is simple, but it is not an easy one. Stories don't just happen. They always have an impact on the things that people believe and hold dear. If I don't talk about that impact then I will remain stuck in the happening.
'And I am sure you will write it well', my publisher said. 'I am sure it will be a really good story, but you have to bring it home. And home is where we feel what you write.'
Thank you very much.
The title I have in mind for my next book is strangely fitting. I am not going to say what it is just yet, but it has everything to do with the borders we set for ourselves and the borders that keep us where we are.