Sunday, October 12, 2008

Les Petites Histories

I've been surrounded by short stories recently. Fortunately for me, that is not a problem.

The first in my slew of short stories is Neil Gaiman's collect, Fragile Things. Gaiman is one of my favourite authors, who has posted several of his short stories online (I highly recommend 'A Study in Emerald'). My copy of his work is actually a book on CD, read aloud by Neil himself. *sighs* It is absolutely beautiful. I am normally not a huge audio book fan (being easily distracted visually and therefore prone to not completely listening to what is playing), but for Neil, I will make an exception. I heard him read 'Other People' aloud when he had a book signing near my house a few years back, and I was completely blown away. The way he reads, the inflections that he knows to add, make the stories live and wrap themselves around you. Gaiman already has a very distictive writing style (though he is one of the most versitile writers I know), and his rendition of his works make it all the better. The one problem with completely immerging myself in Neil Gaiman? I start writing my manuscript and he comes out of my pen, not me. Oops.

The second in my short story adventure is Sword and Sorceress, Vol. XIII, an anthology edited by Marion Zimmer Bradley. S&S anthologies have reached up into the 20s and are a collection of fantasy short stories collected and edited by Marion Zimmer Bradley (continued after her death by Diana L. Paxson and Elisabeth Walters) that all feature strong female characters in roles generally not assigned to women. The stories can be hit or miss (for the tradition epic-adventure-fantasy-story can really bore me after a few paragraphs, and those will occur), and MZB and I differ in our opinion on what makes a good story, but I still really like them. Because the first book was published in 1984, and have been published almost yearly since them, many of them are only available in used book stores. Now, I'm trying to collect them all, and I currently have 11 of the 22 (*celebration for having reached the half-way point*), only just purchasing #11 (er, technically Vol. 13, since I'm not collecting them in order) yesterday. It probably would be possible to find them online, but I enjoy searching used book stores and finding them there (and hey, it's got me half way through, so I think I'm doing pretty well). Despite the stories being published by different authors, they all are rather similar (in fact, MZB will remark on how each year her anthology will have an unofficial theme to it), exhibiting a common writing style generally found only in fantasy.

The final short story is my own. I have an idea in my head about what I want my story to look like, and how my characters (well, at least the main character, Violet) will act. I have to be careful, though, about when I write. If I write too soon after reading any short story, that author's writing style will bleed through my own writing, leading it off in a different direction from the one I originally intended. I've had to scrap entire paragraphs because I will look at them and go, "Nope, that's not me. Can't have someone else writing my story." However, reading these other short stories gives me inspiration. When I write short stories, I make them short. That is, we're talking several pages, max. Not 15 pages minimum, like this one needs to be. Reading Gaiman's and other author's longer short stories, though, where they still pull off a story in a reasonable length of time without making it seem to be only a snippet of a novel, has really encouraged me and made me feel as if I will be able to make my own work. : D

Now, back to the books for me.
-J

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