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by fireflydances » Mon Oct 22, 2018 7:33 pm
I agree. Stories don't necessarily get written in the order that they appear on the page. And they are constantly evolving, adding elements, dropping out entire scenes or characters.
I think that Patti was giving her a sense of her process in terms of where inspiration can take a person: the slightest tingle of an idea, fragments of images, going deeper, etc. Each writer has a process that works. I love that Murakami says he goes into "weird, secret places in myself" and that King talks about “a way of saying to the mind, you’re going to be dreaming.” Stories are never logical outputs, as an essay might be. The short story process has more in common with painting or song-writing or even decorating a room. It's gut level, dream level. Images that come out of nowhere and then suddenly open for you into another whole reality. There really is a sense of letting go of the conscious mind, of drifting or day-dreaming.
After the inspiration, comes the hard part. You know your character in a general almost moody sense. You now take all that and ask yourself 30 or 40 questions about "who" this person is. Your answers continue the day dream but build a stronger image. Then dialogue, in which the words need to "spot on" fit with the character and move your reader along with the action. And plot events that are necessary and not just clutter.
So, she showed us a bit. Her final story may have been worked for days, or weeks or even months. Some writers write a piece straight out, one burst of inspiration, and then let the piece lay fallow, sit on a back shelf. They come back and maybe they fiddle with the thing a bit, and maybe there wholesale re-drafting of sections.
If you've ever knit sweater, sewed a dress, made curtains you have gone from inspiration to color, to fabric, to pattern or no pattern, to stuff that comes out perfect, and stuff that needs to be ripped out and begun again. All creative efforts are a combination of bursts, starts and stops, and improvisation.
"Some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed and some few to be chewed and digested." Sir Francis Bacon, Of Studies