“This guide steers away from lists of how-tos, filling a niche for readers and writers who are as interested in experiencing the journey to better writing as arriving at the destination.” —Library Journal
The Jane Austen Writers' Club is out tomorrow in the US! It is the first creative writing guide to look at the methods and devices used by the world's most beloved novelist.
Here Rebecca Smith examines the major aspects of writing fiction—plotting, characterization, openings and endings, dialogue, settings, and writing methods—sharing the advice Austen gave in letters to her aspiring novelist nieces and nephew, and providing many and varied exercises for writers to try, using examples from Austen's work. These include:
Show your character doing the thing he or she most loves doing. In the opening scene of Persuasion, Sir Walter Elliot looks himself up in the Baronetage, which is the Regency equivalent of Googling oneself. That single scene gives us a clear understanding of the kind of man he is and sets up the plot.
Show your character doing the thing he or she most loves doing. In the opening scene of Persuasion, Sir Walter Elliot looks himself up in the Baronetage, which is the Regency equivalent of Googling oneself. That single scene gives us a clear understanding of the kind of man he is and sets up the plot.
· Send a character our wearing something that they have no choice about or something that will be disapproved of or get the wrong sort of attention. Develop the characters of the observers too, such asAusten does in Mansfield Park when Mr. Rushworth shows how pleased he is by the opportunity to wear a silly costume for the theatricals.
Rebecca Smith is the author of three novels published by Bloomsbury: The Bluebird Café (2001), Happy Birthday and All That (2003), and A Bit of Earth (2006). Barbara Trapido called her “the perfect English miniaturist.”
Rebecca studied History at the University of Southampton and is now a Teaching Fellow in English and Creative Writing there. From autumn 2009 until summer 2010, Rebecca was the Writer in Residence atJane Austen's House Museum in Chawton, Hampshire; she continues to work closely with the Museum. She is also the author of Jane Austen's Guide to Modern Life's Dilemmas, published in 2012. She is JaneAusten's great great great great great niece.
Rebecca granted me a short interview about writing and teaching creative writing, how she came to publish this new guide and, of course, her great great great great great aunt, Jane Austen!
Rebecca Smith |
The Jane Austen Writers Club is your second non-fiction publication based on Jane
Austen’s work after Jane
Austen's Guide to Modern Life's Dilemmas (2012) . It is a creative
writing guide based on Jane Austen’s
letters, novels and juvenilia. Why Jane
Austen? What can she especially teach us about the job of writing?
I’m sure your readers will agree that Jane Austen is one of
the greatest, probably the greatest
novelist of all time. Her novels enchant, move and delight two hundred years
after they were first published. Her work is so complex and such a joy to read.
It just made sense to look at her methods and the way she lived her life –
those things which (along with her genius) made her such a great writer. She
understood human beings so well and captures exactly what it is like to be in
love, to be part of a complicated family, to be bullied, to get things
wrong...the list goes on and on. Her writing is so precise and she is so good
at comedy and dialogue.
I was the Writer in
Residence at Jane Austen’s House Museum and have run lots of writing workshops
there – the book has grown from that. I also teach creative writing at the
University of Southampton in Hampshire, England. I’ve noticed that books on
writing tend to use examples from 20th and 21st century literature. I’ve learnt so much from Jane’s novels and
letters and the hundreds of happy hours I’ve spent at the Museum. I wanted to
put that into a book.
How similar and how
different is it being a writer at present or in Jane Austen’s times?
It’s very
similar. Jane had to keep working through difficult times and faced rejection
and disappointment.
What is different is that when she was
starting out she couldn’t, or felt that she shouldn’t, act for herself. She had
to rely on her father and Henry to act as her agents. In some ways this may
have been a choice as some other female novelists at the time were much more in
the public eye. It was her father who first contacted publishers on her behalf
and Henry who helped her to retrieve Susan
(later Northanger Abbey) from the
publishers who had been sitting on it for years.
I often wonder how she must have felt when
James and Henry went to Oxford. Did she wish that she could go to university?
Her brothers, with the exception of George, travelled abroad. She must have
longed to see more of the world too – think of Catherine Morland talking about
the south of France. Things are much
better for women now, in the UK anyway but definitely not everywhere.
Among the many tips,
methods and devices you included in your book, could you pick up the three
golden Austen rules to be a good writer?
- Read. We know that Jane was
a voracious and ominvorous reader.
- Keep working and don’t
give up. Jane was serious about writing for twenty years before she was
published.
- Push yourself and
experiment. Jane Austen was a poineer in her use of language, the way that she utlized free indirect
narration and point of view, and in the things she chose to write about. She
kept challenging herself – look at the list of her heroines in the order
she created them. She kept trying to do things differently. She opened her novels in so many different
ways and kept exploring different themes.
While reading Jane
Austen’s letters and researching her
writings and life for your new book, did you discover anything about her that
you didn’t know or expect?
I changed the way that I thought about her years in Bath.
The traditional view was that those years hadn’t been very productive.
Professor Kathryn Sutherland’s book Jane Austen’s Textual Lives is really
illuminating. I’ve learnt al lot from that and from her brilliant talks at jane
Austen’s House Museum. The Bath years were very hard with Mr Austen’s death and
the frequent moves, but Jane kept working, just not as fast or productively as
she did during her much happier Chawton period.
Many academics
consider “Emma” Jane Austen’s best
written achievement, her masterpiece. Do you agree with them?
I love all her novels, but yes. I often wish that I hadn’t
read Emma so that I could have the
pleasure of reading it for the first time and being surprised at what is
revealed. The passage where Emma looks out from Ford’s and observes everyday
life in Highbury and then sees Frank Churchill and Mrs Weston approaching and
assumes that they are on their way to Hartfield to visit her is one of my
favourite in all literature. I think Jane Austen would have done a little more
with Persuasion if she hadn’t been
ill.
Let’s play “what if…”
, Rebecca. What kind of novels would she have written, if she had lived in
Hampshire now? Well, and would she have lived in Hampshire, do you think?
That’s
tricky. It’s impossible to think about the contemporary novel without Jane
Austen’s influence! My guess is that her novels would still have contemporary
settings and be about love and complicated families and have plenty of humour
and irony. In a letter dated April 1st, 1816 she told James Stanier Clark, the
Prince Rejent’s Librarian “... I must keep to my own style and go on in my own
way...I am convinced that I should totally fail in any other.”
She did her best work in the tranquillity of
the Hampshire countryside, but who knows? I hope so, then I’d be more likely to
meet her. Her life would have been very different if she’d had different
opportunities. Perhaps she’d be a Professor of English or Music as well as
being a novelist.
As a writer, what do
you particularly envy Jane Austen?
Her genius, of
course. I’m lucky to have a big
supportive family like hers. I wish my house was like Chawton Cottage and that
my garden looked like hers. I’d like a writing box like Jane’s too. But
seriously, imagine creating characters as well loved as Jane’s.
Thanks a lot, Rebecca, for taking the time to answer my questions. Gook luck with your writing and your teaching!
8 comments:
This sounds fantastic!
this sounds like a wonderful resource book!
denise
I'm really looking forward to reading this soon.
This sounds like a great book, I can't wait to read more. Thanks for the giveaway!
I look forward to the tips and tricks! Sounds really interesting!
Very interesting! Thx for posting.
Very interesting! Thx for posting.
Thanks for the post. I just bought this one tonight, it looked too good to pass up!!
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