Category Archives: Craft & Skills

Finding Your Aha! in Non-Fiction Writing

Welcome to November – it’s non-fiction month!

Writing stories – that’s what we do, most certainly! Then there are those non-fiction things that we’re forced to write to sell the creative. Back jacket book blurb, synopsis, query letter – which is the most frustrating one for you? Or, are they all understandably so? We’ll get some tips on those as well as cool information on things like ghost writing, blogging, writing grants and understanding those pesky editorial mark ups. Just to make it all easier and to make more sense, Adria Laycraft, our guest on Tuesday November 4th, will talk about the difference between fiction and technical writing.

No matter what we write, there is story to be found, even in non-fiction and our November 16th guest, Billie Milholland will tell us about that. There is even money to be made with nonfiction, as Guy Anthony De Marco, Colette Black and guest Tereasa Maille will show us.

I must confide that sometimes I find it very difficult to switch from writing pure fiction to writing the technical stuff especially when it comes to promoting my own work. But I’ve come to realize that I’m quite comfortable translating the technical/scientific to people. I see stories in whatever I write. As a speaker, on business planning, agricultural marketing and food safety/food science, that’s a great skill to have. I always can find the stories in the science and business to translate into easily accessible information. When I understood the story, understood my audience and what they needed, and how they needed to hear it, magic happened. The aha! moments abounded, faces furrowed with confusion would grin and light up. People became excited about the possibilities for they could now see themselves as part of the story.

That makes non-fiction writing much the same as fiction writing – there is a story to tell, there is information, ideas, feelings to communicate. The language and the rules may be slightly different but it always comes down to story.

So, I’m looking forward to November. Anything, any hint or aha! that helps me convey the non-fiction better is awesome. I hope you have fun with it too!

And as a special treat, Fictorian Greg Little will be launching his new book Unwilling Souls. Watch for that blog – it promises to be good!

Wrapping Up October (Mummy-Style!)

We’ve had a heck of a scary month at the Fictorians. Halloween is tomorrow, when the undead and the kiddies wander around playing trick-or-treat. Earlier this month, we had the real horror — presidential debates and political congressional hearings took over the airwaves. It’s Christmas for folks who love dark fiction and black humor.

We’ve heard from wonderful guest authors this month, such as Nicole Cushing, Tonya De Marco, Matthew Warner, Petra Klarbrunn, Pamela K. Kinney and Annik Valkanberg.  Some of them appeared for first time on the Fictorians. We’ve learned all about writing horror and dark fiction from the usual suspects, plus how to mix genres together, get romantic with the dark side, and even channeling dark periods in one’s life into fiction.

Next month, we’ll be concentrating on writing non-fiction, including query letters and blurbs.

For the first time on the Fictorians, tomorrow on Halloween we have a treat for you. After you’re back from raiding the candy stores of your neighbors, curl up under a blanket, munch on a Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup, and visit us for some flash-fiction scary stories from the Fictorians and their friendly honored guests.

The Semi-True Story

I gave a copy of Fossil Lake:  An Anthology of the Aberrant to my parents with a proviso attached:  it’s not autobiographical.

fossilThe assumption would be easy enough to make.  My contribution to Fossil Lake, the short story “Mishipishu:  The Ghost Story of Penny Jaye Prufrock,” is set at a summer camp for kids.  The name of the camp in the story, Camp Zaagaigan (the Algonquin word for “lake”) is fictional; so is Lake Mishipishu (I actually checked on the maps and found a Mishibishu Lake…)  My parents, however, would be able to name the real camp and the real lake after they read the story:  from the cabin line to that infamous H-dock, the layout of Camp Zaagaigan mirrors its real-world counterpart, and they drove me there often enough to recognize it.

From there it’s just one step further to wondering how much more of the story is real.

I’m often asked whether the characters in my story are “me,” or whether the events are “real,” and all I can ever say is that I write semi-true stories.  Semi-true in that I’ve never been able to take a person, event, or revelation and transcribe it into fiction word-for-word.  As a writer friend of mine says, real life doesn’t have to make sense, but fiction does.  Even if I’m starting with something “inspired by a true story,” in order to make event or character coherent, I have to add things here, or take things away that might have happened in real life, but don’t add anything useful to the tale I’m telling.  Sometimes changes to the story make it more dramatic, more compelling, or more satisfying; and so the events “inspired by a true story” move ever farther away from a faithful reflection of reality.  After all, I’m writing fiction—I’m not required to report on reality.  I’m required to tell an engaging and powerful tale.

And semi-true in that I do my best to write characters who feel real:  who behave in realistic ways, who are recognizable and relatable, who are emotionally honest.  When I write them, I put myself in their position and see the world through their eyes; and yes, to an extent, I feel what they feel, and try to express that emotion in the words I’m writing.  Often this emotional connection is informed by my own real-world experiences.  I do know what being bullied feels like.  I do know what doing something I know is against the rules feels like.  I don’t know what it feels like to drown, but I do know what it feels like to not be able to breathe, so I write about that…and imagine one step farther, based on research and my own ideas.  These characters aren’t me, but they have pieces of my emotions inside them.

So no, I was never bullied at that summer camp you sent me to,  Mom and Dad.  No, I never snuck out of the cabin after hours.  No, I was never a suicidal twelve-year-old, and no, I’ve never lost sight of the line between reality and imagination.

…or at least, I’ve always found it again in time.

About Mary: 

Mary Pletsch is a glider pilot, toy collector and graduate of the University of Huron College, the Royal Military College of Canada and Dalhousie University. She is the author of several previously published short stories in a variety of genres, including science fiction, steampunk, fantasy and horror. She currently lives in New Brunswick with Dylan Blacquiere and their four cats.

How I Learned to Write Horror by Working in Haunted Houses

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In ’07 and ’08 I worked in a haunted house. This wasn’t an historic house with spectral residents. No, I worked in one of those maze of horrors attractions that pops up every October. I know. It seems like the only way there would be any parallel between horror stories and a cheesy maze is if they had someone dressed up as an iconic character scaring the guests. I won’t say you’re wrong. There’s plenty of that. However professional haunted house organizers and scare aficionados know that it takes more than a guy in a Jason mask to really terrify. It’s a series of psychological manipulations.

Long before the first guest walked through the front door the layout of the maze and the contents therein were carefully planned. The main goal was for the guest to leave terrified but with their trousers unsoiled (because no one wanted to clean that up) and we definitely didn’t want anyone to die of a heart attack. To accomplish that we started the maze with mild scares like a room full of creepy dolls or a Gypsy fortune teller that only predicts death, and then gradually worked up to the really big final scare. However doing one scare after another doesn’t work. In fact it tends to decrease the efficacy of the subsequent scares. In order for the bigger elements to have full affect the guests needed periodic breathers so they could finish processing the previous scare and catch their breath before screaming for the next.

Any of this sound familiar?

That’s right. I’m talking about pacing.

Normally pacing is used to keep the reader from getting bored or psychologically overwhelmed. The latter is certainly the most pertinent point for horror but there are other reasons and pitfalls that other genres may not have. For instance in both fiction and haunted houses the number of breathers that you should include will mostly depend on the length and intensity of the work. A short story won’t need any low points since it’s over by the time the reader reaches their limit. In a longer work you do need to give your audience periodic breathers so they don’t wet their trousers but you need to be sure that those breathers still move the story. You also don’t want to be predictable. Horror readers are clever. If you fall into a pattern — medium scare, breather, big scare, etc — they’re going figure it out pretty quickly.

Horror readers are expecting, even daring you to scare them. They know the tropes and common tricks and can spot plot device faster than you can say Cthulhu. You can have the most original concept and unique scares but if you fall into a predictable pattern it will undermine everything. Be unexpected. One year we had a creepy undertaker measure guests for coffins before they even walked in the door. Another year we had a guy with a chainsaw (sans blades for safety) jump out from behind a bush after guests exited the maze. Some of our scariest rooms were where we took things that people found mildly creepy — porcelain dolls, dentists, spiders — and turned it up to 11.

You can also use the same breathers I mentioned earlier to increase the potency of a smaller scare. My last year at the haunted house was right after the Weeping Angels debuted on Doctor Who. The show hadn’t yet reached the level popularity that it has now so we were able to borrow the idea without the guests catching on to what we were up to. We, the angels, were in a hall between two scare rooms. The room after us was a medium scare (a knife-wielding maniac).

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(Photo courtesy of Takara Zavala.)

(That’s me on the right.)

In full light our costumes don’t look much like the original; in fact they looked as inexpensive as they were but in in the dim light of the maze it was chilling. The low light made our skin look like it was the same color as the toga and wings — completing the statue effect — and the eye holes in the masks turned into dark, bottomless caverns that sent shivers down many spines. We stood next to the wall, motionless, in a praying pose that gave guests a false sense of security. As they passed we would follow them into the next room. Some would notice us right away and walk faster to the next room. Others wouldn’t notice us until they were in the next room, which was actually better because we blocked the way back. They couldn’t run past the threats they already knew about. They had no choice but to face the unknown scares beyond. The overall affect was enough to make frat boys scream like little girls.

The same thing can be done in fiction. After a big scare you can slow down the pacing or remove the threat enough to give that false sense of security, that moment to catch their breath before the character and readers realize that they aren’t safe at all. Because of the big scare that preceded the break is still fresh in the reader’s mind if you put a mild scare after that, the moment will feel much larger than it really is. Having a short break like that is also a great trick because not only does it makes the story less predictable, you don’t lose any of the tension and fear that you’ve carefully built. 

See Kim May’s bio page.