Some
years ago, I co-authored a musical. It was based on Charles Dickens’ story,
“The Cricket on the Hearth,” one of his Christmas tales. I did the libretto
(the script and song lyrics) and a colleague wrote the music. We invited a
critic from the local newspaper to the opening night and, the next day, he gave
us a favorable review. Like most reviewers, he seemed to feel he had to make
one negative remark and said, “The opening song of the second act did nothing
to advance the plot.”
The
opening song of the second act was “Just To Be On Stage,” a song one of the
main characters sings about how much he loves being an actor. It was a funny
song in which the actor paused and quoted lines from Shakespeare. In all
deference to the reviewer, I will admit it did nothing or not a lot to “advance
the plot”—but why did it have to? That everything you write has to advance the
plot is writing cliché number one.
It’s
easy to understand how such things get started. No one wants to read a
meandering book full of digressions and pointless action. A book has to have
direction. A novel is most often organized around the principle of plot. Edgar
Allan Poe, in his discourse that defined the modern short story, said nothing must
distract from the action that carries the story along (that is, the plot). But,
as often happens in religion, what was designed to be a guideline for making life
better eventually became a burdensome rule that people are forced to follow.
Plot is ubiquitous—it is everywhere and, supposedly, is the driving force in a
novel. So everything in the piece of fiction, it follows, must support,
advance, or aid the development of plot in some way.
This
has led to some misdirection.
Very
often, in writer’s groups and in what I come across when I read to see what’s
being written today, I encounter books that are simply plots. It’s supposedly
good to be “plot-driven,” but very often this emphasis on plot robs the book of
richness. There is no character development, no skillful use of setting, no
creation of mood of atmosphere, no symbolism, and no unique narrative voice. The
story is a sequence of events, which, for me at least, quickly becomes boring because
the elements mentioned above do not accompany it.
Some
famous books do not have plots. Willa Cather’s Death Comes to the Archbishop, written in 1927 and widely read and
taught today, does not have a plot. It is a series of vignettes on the life of
a Catholic priest living in Mexico during the last part of the nineteenth
century. The sequence of years in his life give the book form, but really it
has no overriding conflict. Yet it is a rich, vivid text. One of my favorite
novels, The French Lieutenant’s Woman by
John Fowles, is thin on plot. The main character sees a mysterious woman
standing on a pier and becomes curious about her. Eventually, they fall in love
and his world of Victorian propriety comes crashing down around him. But still,
the narration is more important than the simple plot. My all-time favorite
novel, Wuthering Heights, does have a
plot with the formula of Want/Obstacle/Action, but the characters and what they
are like are much more important than the very simple plot of the book.
Clichés,
of course, arise for a reason. Beginning writers need to learn how to stick
with the story so they do not wander and bore
the reader. The reader wants to
know what happens next. But plot is not the be-all and end-all of a book. And
books that are only a sequence of events and fail to bring in the other
elements of writing—character, narrative, symbolism, setting, theme—tend to be
dull and, yes, boring, after a while.
Meryl Streep as The French Lieutenant's Woman |
So
remember there are many other things in a book beside the plot. What happens is
important, but it must not be the only thing in a novel. It can be a strong
element—it should be a strong element—must be a strong element; but it is
certainly not everything. If it is everything, the novel will be boring and
incomplete.
More
clichés to come!
Get
a copy of my full-length novel The Sorceress of the Northern Seas. It has a great plot, but not just that.
Check
out my Writer's Page.
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