Flash Reviews of Under-Appreciated
Fiction
We will be looking at short excerpts of prose
– in this case the opening paragraph of The Virgin Suicides by the brilliant
Jeffrey Eugenides – to decipher how the motifs of great writing – life, love,
loss, regret and the seemingly elusive quest for meaning, transcendence and
redemption are communicated by the nuts and bolts applications of craft.
Every compelling writer has mastered craft to a
degree where we, as readers, are almost unaware of how we are being drawn in –
line by line – into the author’s story. Every couple of weeks we will look at
prose by great modern and postmodern authors (like Roth, Atwood, DeLillo,
Palhniuk & others), popular fiction and memoir (Eat,
Love, Pray will be flash reviewed soon), as well as genre
pieces (PossiblyTwilight and others) to
understand what makes these authors’ craft so effective.
Because this is the first blog entry for WordSmiths and because
beginnings are so very hard (I struggled with this one!), to honor this
occasion, I’d like to take a look at a beginning. But first, I want to
give a word of general caution on beginnings – well more than a word – how
about several.
First of all, it’s easy to obsess about
beginnings, combing through those first sentences to get them just right long
before you’ve written your manuscript. With those first words, you must raise
questions for your reader, immerse them in the world you’ve created, and more
than anything else, you want to get the momentum going so that the reader is
led, much like the proverbial donkey and carrot, through the story. It’s
a tall order and you can spend months trying to get it just right before you’ve
even written your story. Lord knows I’ve done it and it can be a fabulous
way to feel as if you are writing while you are in fact wasting time. Resist that urge. It will hold you back from the
story that wants to be told.
The second mistake we often make is to begin
in ways we find extremely clever, but which in fact do more to confuse the
reader than to inspire them. This would be your Finnegan’s Wake opening, where the reader enters
with so many questions they can’t figure out where to turn their attention (In
FW it would be, what is this word supposed to be?!). This can be pulled
off by people like Joyce, but as they say, proceed at your own peril. The
antithesis to this is we often begin in tried and true ways “the alarm clock
rang and Tim saw, from his crusted over eyes, the cascades of jet black hair
that did not belong to Tracy, his overly perky, overly peroxided, blonde
wife.” This is the alarm clock opening, and while it may work, it is a
trope, so be wary of it.
My suggestion is to write a functional beginning, a sentence
that begins ‘in the middle of the action” and then write your story/book, etc.,
and then rewrite the beginning to fit the actual fiction you produced.
Trust me, you will feel much more inspired to get that beginning just right
when you know what comes after it.
That said, let’s look at how one author pulls
off a successful beginning by analyzing one of the most underrated, vibrant,
works of fiction written in the last twenty years – The Virgin Suicides by Jeffrey
Eugenides. This book tells the story of a group of sisters who commit suicide, but of course it is far
more than that – an elegy to the loss of innocence, a testament to the power of
suburban oppression, a meditation on the nature of longing, and more. And
this is all set up in the opening scene.
“On the
morning the last Lisbon daughter took her turn at suicide – it was Mary this
time, and sleeping pills, like Therese – the two paramedics arrived at the
house knowing where the knife drawer was, and the gas oven, and the beam in the
basement from which it was possible to tie a rope. They got out of the EMS
truck, as usual moving much too slowly in our opinion, and the fat one said
under his breath “This ain’t TV, folks, this is how fast we go.” He was
carrying the heavy respirator and the cardiac unit past the bushes that had
grown monstrous and over the erupting lawn, tame and immaculate thirteen months
earlier when the trouble began.”
The beauty of this opening, from a craft point of view, is that
the first sentence clearly communicates that we are in the middle of the
‘action’ while also placing the reader at the start of a new set of
actions. The term “the last” Lisbon daughter and the phrase “took her
turn at suicide” both imply that others have come before
her. The narrator/s tells us that the trouble (but what trouble?) began
thirteen months earlier. We enter the story with questions. How many
Lisbon girls were there? Why did they all attempt to commit suicide? What happened thirteen
months ago? And how successful is Mary? The others? We are
awash with questions – however we are not adrift in the world.
This is an important craft point to emphasize. Unless you’re
Becket dabbling in his later fictions, you don’t want to lose the reader. So
how do you raise questions and not lose the reader? Eugenides uses solid,
descriptive language to anchor us in place. We have a “knife drawer”
rather than the much more nebulous “knives”, a “gas oven”, a “beam” in the
basement and a “fat” paramedic who “as usual” moved too slowly. And then we
have the bushes, “monstrous and erupting.” The physical world grounds the
reader in an actual physical space, each object defined in most cases by one
very clear adjective (not two or three, but one).
The author also gives us a specific time frame for the start of
the action – thirteen months prior. This grounding lets the questions
about the nature of the action in the story sit and waits because the reader is
already titillated and now is satisfied (partially) with the visual world
unfolding before him or her. In short, the reader is given two different starts
– one a set of questions about the suicides, and two– the suburban
world of Grosse Pointe, Michigan. And this is what reading is – an act of
seeking information so we can assemble a coherent meaning as well as an act of
watching a world we’ve seen but never truly seen rise before us.
Also notice how Eugenides refuses to hide the
major action of the story – the suicides. He opens with them,
thereby transferring the mystery (i.e.
what’s happening) from that physical act to questions about why? Who is
telling us this? What are the results of the suicideattempts? And why
all these sisters? The bigger issues hover out there while the physical
setting and action of the story comes to the fore. This is one technique,
but a very important one, for keeping the reader engaged. Put your reader in a
place, don’t withhold information just to withhold it. When you withhold, do so
with the larger questions of why, who did it, what’s the purpose, etc.
It’s a lot to handle, but you can do it, especially if you know your story.
Joseph Chinnock
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