Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Transitions

Last week, I watched a TV show about castaways stranded on a time-hopping island, read a book wherein an Irish priest faces off against the gods of Dark Ages-era Norway, and viewed a space epic on the big screen full of doomed battles and desperate stands. They had dramatically different tones and styles, and each excelled at separate parts of the storyteller’s art, one possessing thematic heft, another admirably sharp dialogue and yet another a taut plot. But they all grasped an essential aspect of narrative, one that sets the pros apart from the amateurs: They understood transitions.

When you think about it, transitions are strange things. You usually don’t notice them. But they’re there as you stroll along the road laid out by a particular story, gently bending the path this way and that, grading the way as it climbs up the crags, filling in the boggy bits deep in the valleys. Indeed, when they make themselves known, it’s often by their absence, those times when the trail jogs abruptly or becomes teeth-rattlingly rough or drops off altogether into a yawning chasm.

So how do we avoid sending our readers screaming into the abyss? Ursula K. Le Guin offers wise words in her writing manual Steering the Craft. She notes that narratives are shaped things, curved things, things that glide along a particular course, and that successful ones have "a movement which never ceases, from which no passage departs entirely or for long, and to which all passages contribute in some way." This smoothness, it seems, is a good way to judge your own transitions. You’ve done it right when they carry your readers clear to the end and they've barely felt the journey.

(Picture: CC 2008 by
Mr Hamish)

10 comments:

Chestertonian Rambler said...

Wow--that was three easy works to name.

Does it help that two are the creations of the same mind?

Loren Eaton said...

I dunno. I'm not sure JJ has been intimately involved with the former for a long time.

Most people probably won't be able to identify the second one, and it's a darn shame. Such a good book.

B. Nagel said...

:(

I don't know the book and google won't help. I think the two AV's are easier since they've been recently hyped, well, everywhere.

Loren Eaton said...

This one. Which will hopefully be reviewed soon, provided I finish it this weekend. It's actually two novels in one.

P.S. You know the old axiom about not judging a book by its cover? It definitely applies here.

B. Nagel said...

Ok. Thanks. I've actually seen a few by this guy come through the interlibrary loan. Your original description (less the Irish part) had me revisiting Harry Harrison Hammer and the Cross series.

Loren Eaton said...

The priest is pretty much the only Irish character. Virtually everyone else is Norse. There are a lot of witty digs about nationality in the dialogue and descriptions, though.

ollwen said...

Sounds like good narrative has some things in common with a nice section of single-track. I feel validated.

Loren Eaton said...

Am I correct in assuming that single track refers to mountain biking? I know I'm displaying my ignorance, but I don't usually get outdoors expect to mow my lawn.

ollwen said...

Yep. Mountain biking. Can't blame you, though. South Florida is known for many things, none of which is mountains.

Loren Eaton said...

We actually do have a "mountain biking trail" down here at a state park. It is, as you may well imagine, a truly pitiful thing.