I had a second thought while writing the previous article, and its this: I need to experience more stories outside of sci-fi and fantasy in order to be a better storyteller.268Please respect copyright.PENANAxp9duws8aH
268Please respect copyright.PENANAqeNRzdPbYD
Major Motoko Kusanagi in the 1995 anime movie, "Ghost in the Shell" said it best:
- "If we all reacted the same way, we'd be predictable, and there's always more than one way to view a situation. What's true for the group is also true for the individual. It's simple: overspecialize, and you breed in weakness. It's slow death."268Please respect copyright.PENANA3YpVAaCKdj
268Please respect copyright.PENANAncX4ldqjFa
After I finished writing my first ever book, I was proud. Prouder than proud. I had tried writing 4 novels previously over the course of my life, only to toss each one out due to disappointment with my own skill level. After buckling down and spending years actually learning how to be a storyteller, though, I finally had something to show that I could happily say, "This is mine. I did this. I love it."268Please respect copyright.PENANAphBPnDJBAC
268Please respect copyright.PENANAzzkd29S35U
And it wasn't as good as it could've been.268Please respect copyright.PENANAUwL86u6ZYU
268Please respect copyright.PENANAlNi0NnnLz6
I sent out my story to my friends to read. Two of them have finished it at the time of writing this blog entry. One of them said, "Chris, you really should rethink how some of your characters act towards each other, they seem deliberately obtuse in some cases or a little too aggressive in others."268Please respect copyright.PENANAW5lotXOaLX
268Please respect copyright.PENANAjv8ZtNVCDK
Naturally my first instinct was to explain the criticism away, or brush it off, but it didn't take me long to realize they were right. But not only were they right, their advice towards character interaction made it into the final version of my story in a very big way. So I got to thinking, asking myself, why was that? What were they seeing that I wasn't?268Please respect copyright.PENANA3hscuc88su
268Please respect copyright.PENANA4mk89Zrjq4
The answer is that they read almost exclusively romance novels. 268Please respect copyright.PENANAtAqZ8Ad3t2
268Please respect copyright.PENANAsm3pclOAeq
If fantasy and sci-fi have taught me to treat stories as puzzles, picking apart the plot before I reach the end, romance novels teach how to understand interpersonal relations. 268Please respect copyright.PENANA9wSIXe7fK2
268Please respect copyright.PENANALaaMdzk4cF
So of course my friend was right. They're a master at recognizing appropriate interpersonal relations. Because honestly, who reads romance for the plot? No one. They read it because they want to know the characters and see how they interact with each other. Their motivations. The feelings they hide as opposed to the ones they show, and the reasons behind doing each. Their desires, hopes, and fears.268Please respect copyright.PENANAaiFlpgeh2D
268Please respect copyright.PENANAEX21QBamzd
I've taught myself how to weave a plotline like the fables and fantasies I grew up with. My friend taught themselves how to recognize and convey the stories behind the characters, which was mind-blowing to me. And upon taking their advice I love my story even more.268Please respect copyright.PENANApsbP0Zo8WP
268Please respect copyright.PENANAH06wruP9HA
So read fantasy. Read romance. Just read something else, too, if your aim is to write one day. You'll be stronger for it.268Please respect copyright.PENANAEa8ZG4LxFv
268Please respect copyright.PENANAcqUDx3gP2q
Sincerely,268Please respect copyright.PENANAlYWWwXWjDe
Chris268Please respect copyright.PENANAVnDGvO0BUc
268Please respect copyright.PENANAF2PU3O0b8h
268Please respect copyright.PENANAXXWwWtDPZy
268Please respect copyright.PENANAzAN9Kl6Yf8
268Please respect copyright.PENANA5cg03uCJwR
268Please respect copyright.PENANAEgFXb6mjEt