Sunday, April 27, 2025

A Field Guide To Writing Fiction by A. B. Guthrie, Jr.

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I picked this up at a library sale the other day, and I'm glad I did. There are a lot of books out there on how to write. Most of them are overlong and many are a complete waste of time. A. B. Guthrie, Jr.'s slim volume is neither. It is less than a hundred pages long and close to every word of it is useful to an aspiring or beginning author.

From the Introduction:

Bear in mind that I am addressing myself not to people who want to write but to those who will write or are already writing. Too often I encounter men and women, young and old, who speak of the wish to write and the intention of doing so sometime. They populate the meadows of forlorn hopes.

From a brief chapter (all Guthrie's chapters are brief) on beginning lines, after giving several examples of especially effective openings:

But be careful. You can overdo it and strain the reader's credulity. And don't be upset if you can't come upon a novel beginning. If your story is good, a clear opening is enough.

And here's the opening to the chapter on adjectives and adverbs:

Maxim: The adjective is the enemy of the noun and the adverb the enemy of damn near everything else. Nouns and verbs are the guts of language. That's another engraving for your skull.

I could go on. But these examples tell you everything you need to know about this book: It's terse. It's aphoristic. The language is vivid and direct. The advice is all practical. And, oh yes, every word of it is true.

This is not a volume for the experienced writer. If heeded, however, it can spare a newcomer a lot of anguish and frustration on the road to becoming the writer they wish to be.


And I hear you ask . . .

Is there a better book on how to write? Yes, there is, and both Mr. Guthrie and I agree on what it is. John Gardner's The Art of Fiction is extraordinary. Read this volume first, however. It touches on all the basics.

If you don't have the ready cash, both books are readily available via interlibrary loan.

 

Above: The cover blurb says, "A Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist shares a lifetime of secrets on the art of writing fiction." They're not secrets, unless you're just starting out. But they're all things every writer needs to know.


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1 comment:

John Farrell said...

I still have my John Gardner books. I'd like to add this to my collection, too.