The Plot Jean Korelitz (drm ebook reader TXT) š
- Author: Jean Korelitz
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For a long moment, no one spoke. More than a few of the students seemed newly distracted by the stapled writing samples before them. Finally, Jake said: āIām glad to hear youāre well along on your project, and I hope we can be a resource for you, and a support system. One thing we do know is that writers have always helped other writers, whether or not theyāre in a formal program together. We all understand that writing is a solitary activity. We do our work in privateāno conference calls or brainstorming meetings, no team-building exercises, just us in a room, alone. Maybe thatās why our tradition of sharing our work with fellow writers has evolved the way it has. Thereāve always been groups of us coming together, reading work aloud or sharing manuscripts. And not even just for the company or the sense of community, but because we actually need other eyes on our writing. We need to know whatās working and, even more important, whatās not working, and most of the time we canāt trust ourselves to know. No matter how successful an author is, by whatever metric you measure success, Iām willing to bet they have a reader they trust who sees the work before the agent or publisher does. And just to add a layer of practicality to this, we now have a publishing industry in which the traditional role of āeditorā is diminished. Today, editors want a book that can go straight into production, or as close to that as possible, so if you think Maxwell Perkins is waiting for your manuscript-in-progress to arrive on his desk, so he can roll up his sleeves and transform it into The Great Gatsby, that hasnāt been true for a long time.ā
He saw, to his sadness but not his surprise, that the name āMaxwell Perkinsā was not familiar to them.
āSo in other words, if weāre wise weāll seek out those readers and invite them into our process, which is what weāre all doing here at Ripley. You can make that as formal or informal as you like, but I think our role in this group is to add what we can to the work of our fellow writers, and open ourselves to their guidance as much as possible. And that includes me, by the way. I donāt plan on taking up the classās time with my own work, but I do expect to learn a great deal from the writers in this room, both from the work youāre doing on your own projects and from the eyes and ears and insights you bring to your classmatesā work.ā
Evan Parker/Parker Evan had not stopped grinning once during this semi-impassioned speech. Now he added a head shake to underscore his great amusement. āIām happy to give my opinion on everyoneās writing,ā he said. āBut donāt expect me to change what Iām doing for anyone elseās eyes or ears or noses, for that matter. I know what Iāve got here. I donāt think thereās a person on the planet, no matter how lousy a writer he is, who could mess up a plot like mine. And thatās about all Iām going to say.ā
And with that he folded his arms and shut tight his mouth, as if to ensure that no further morsel of his wisdom might slip past his lips. The great novel underway from Evan Parker/Parker Evan was safe from the lesser eyes, ears, and noses of the Ripley Symposiaās first-year prose fiction workshop.
CHAPTER FOURA Sure Thing
The mother and the daughter in the old house: that was his writing sample. And if ever a work of prose pointed less to a stupendous, surefire, canāt-douse-its-fire plot it could only be something along the lines of an exposĆ© on the drying of paint. Jake took extra time with the piece before his first one-on-one meeting with its author, just to make sure he wasnāt missing a buried Raiders of the Lost Ark springboard or the seeds of some epic Lord of the Rings quest, but if they were there, in the quotidian descriptions of the daughterās homework practices, or the motherās way of cooking creamed corn from a can, or the descriptions of the house itself, Jake couldnāt see it.
At the same time, it sort of annoyed him to note that the writing itself wasnāt terrible. Evan Parkerāand Evan Parker he would be, unless and until he actually succeeded in publishing his threatened masterwork and requiring a privacy-saving pen nameāmight have dwelt upon his supposedly spectacular plot in the workshop but Jakeās obnoxious student had produced eight pages of entirely inoffensive sentences without obvious defects or even the usual writerly indulgences. The bald fact of it was: this asshole appeared to be a natural writer with the kind of relaxed and appreciative relationship with language even those writing programs far higher up the prestige scale than Ripleyās were incapable of teaching, and which Jake himself had never once imparted to a student (as he, himself, had never once received it from a teacher). Parker wrote with an eye for detail and an ear for the way the words wove into sequence. He conjured his two apparent protagonists (a mother named Diandra and her teenage daughter, Ruby) and their home, a very old house in some unnamed part of the country where snow was general in winter, with an economy of description that somehow conveyed these people in their setting, as well as the obvious and even alarming level of tension between them. Ruby, the daughter, was studious and sullen, and she came up out of the page as a closely observed and even textured character. Diandra, the mother, was a less defined but heavy presence at the edges of the daughterās perspective, as Jake supposed one might expect in a capacious old house
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