Have you ever written a chapter, scene, or page of dialogue or description that you thought was truly excellent then reviewed it the next day and thought it awful? I have, any number of times. And I gather from what other writers report that many of them have had the same experience.
If you yourself can’t judge your own writing without swinging from extreme negative criticism to high praise, then how can you know whether your writing is truly good? Is it painting the picture you want to paint? Is it drawing the reader into the story? Is it building suspense, gaining empathy for your protagonist, causing the reader to reflect on the great mysteries of life?
Your right brain wants to believe, but your left brain wants to criticize. After all, it’s the supreme editor, and if it can’t find anything wrong with the right brain’s work, then the left brain is out of a job. Therefore, it would seem that the only thing to do is to let someone else decide the merit of your work.
Now, that is not always the best idea. Ultimately, it is up to you, the author, to determine what you want to say with your writing and how best to communicate it. Many long-time writers have come to terms with this conundrum and learned to trust their own instincts. They have no need for or interest in anyone else’s input while working on a manuscript. That can be a good thing. But what about the novice who hasn’t fully developed zir author voice or refined zir craft and needs some help?
With the aid of a friend who literally walked around London with my manuscript in her arms, going from one literary agency to another, I was able to obtain a top London agent, Tessa Sayle, to represent my first novel, A Bit of Sun. Before she flew to the West Indies to meet me, Tess sent me a letter noting a dozen or so places in the manuscript that she found confusing or thought should be revised for one reason or another. I made those changes quite easily and without complaint. No problem, no argument. If those few details were my agent’s only criticisms, I was sailing before the wind.
However, by the time we actually met in person, Tess had received half a dozen rejection letters from editors in the UK and so recommended I just “chalk this one up to experience” and start working on my next novel.
As you can well imagine, I resisted this advice and pressed her to come up with a way to “save” my book, a way to make it more appealing to current editors and publishers. Tess gave it a bit of thought and then suggested that I might cut a major portion of the odyssey section of the novel, which admittedly includes some highly unlikely events, and spend more time on the antagonist, which might appeal to the publishing world’s desire to see more fiction pertaining to power and greed.
I nodded as I sat before her, thinking that this could be done, and perhaps it was worth a try. But when I returned to the manuscript with the intention of actually committing such a gutting, I realized that it was quite impossible. Not literally impossible, of course, but thematically impossible. It would yank the heart right out of my story. How then would my protagonist ever know the strength of his own character? How would he learn to question tradition or come to understand the emotions buried deep in his heart?
As for power and greed, I have never had much interest in either. Some may want to read about characters whose main goals in life are financial gain and dominance over others, but I am not among them. And if I don’t care to read such a book, why on earth would I want to write one?
So I told Tess no, I couldn’t (wouldn’t) do it, and years later simply published the book myself because I know it’s a good story well told regardless of whether anyone else wants to publish it. In other words, it’s art to me, and I refuse to let the dictates of commercialism turn it into elephant ears. (And by “elephant ears” I mean that “treat” made of fried flour with a bit of sugar thrown in that even the Dominican Republic’s stray dogs won’t eat.)
On the flip side, I am most grateful to my agent and other friends who read my manuscript and told me that this or that passage bothered them or did not seem true to character. I gave their comments serious thought and often revised or deleted those passages as recommended, much to my later relief and undying gratitude for their thoughtful comments. Other times, after due consideration, I kept the passages questioned and have no regrets.
Bottom line? If you do have others read your manuscript prior to publication, listen to what they have to say, try to find out why they disapprove of any passages they don’t like, and then decide whether those passages should be kept, revised, or tossed.
When it comes to your own work, only you can decide what is art and what is elephant ears.
© 2021 Ann Henry, all rights reserved.
Photo: Art & Elephant Ears © 2014 Ann Henry, all rights reserved.