Blog Post: Experimenting

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New blog post by Claire G – discussions in this thread, please
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Be Brave

I’ve been writing seriously for years. The more I wrote (and read the work of other authors), the more I experimented with different genres, voice, style and structures. I realised I had nothing to lose by going down experimental rabbit holes, except time and effort. But hey, writing is a craft, right? And a craft has to be worked at! Besides, it’s hardly a chore when it’s your passion.



How? What? Why?

Read widely in the genre you fancy having a go at. Analyse the pace, tone, plot structure etc. What works? What doesn’t?

Choose what aspect of your writing style you’ll experiment with – this could be at prose-level e.g. being more economical with language, or a big picture structural change, such as attempting different timelines or multiple perspectives. Which person and tense will you write in? Perhaps you could re-write a section of your story in each option (usually first or third person and past or present tense) and consider which has the most impact and why.

The reason for experimentation is obvious…YOU MIGHT MAKE YOUR WRITING BETTER!



Don’t Be Afraid To Fail

Of course, not every experiment will work. Don’t beat yourself up about this. It’s like scientists when they start from the null hypothesis – the idea that there IS no meaningful relationship between variables. They attempt to determine if they can reject the null hypothesis, not prove the experimental hypothesis (at least this is what I remember from my psychology studies a loooong time ago! If there are any scientists reading, please feel free to correct me!).

In authorial terms, we could create a null hypothesis for our writing experiment, e.g. There will be no effect of changing from third person narrative to first person narrative. Now, of course, measuring the ‘effect’ of writing is not scientific (I suppose we could survey readers?), but for the purposes of illustration, there are three possible outcomes from this experiment:

  • We prove the null hypothesis – there’s no difference in the effect created by first or third person.
  • We determine that first person is, in fact, more effective than third (e.g. because it allows us inside the character’s mind more directly).
  • We discover that third person was more effective after all (e.g. because it can allow us to see and know what the character can’t).

Either way, you’ve proven or eliminated possibilities.



A Touch of Reality


Experimenting can be exciting and it can be rewarding, but I’ve learned that such writing can be a risk when it comes to getting published for the first time. But if you’ve got an idea and a voice that just won’t let go, I say go for it! You never know where it will lead.



Experience


I’ve probably mentioned before that I finally secured a literary agent with a book which is very experimental. This is in terms of both style and structure – it was the first time I’d used an economical style; I used repetition of phrases throughout in an attempt to make a lasting impact; I included ten (yes, ten!) working-class (shocking!) characters’ perspectives which rotate throughout the story; and I wrote about a difficult, hard-hitting subject that I have personal experience of, in real, raw, gritty, authentic detail. The book may be viewed as transgressive. Publishers may be put off by the ‘taboo’ nature of some of the content. But do you know what? This is the story I wish I could have read when I faced a difficult time in my life. I couldn’t find it, so I wrote it. And boy was it liberating and cathartic!



Final Thoughts

Do you experiment? How?

What have been your successes? What have you tried which hasn’t worked?

I think that my most successful short stories (the ones I get the best reader response from) are the ones written in ‘risky’ second person. Have you ever taken a risk with your writing and did it pay off?
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By @Claire G
Get the discussion going – post your thoughts & comments in the thread below…
 
Hi Claire! Great post. And huge kudos to you for writing that raw, gritty, personal, "taboo" experimental story. That takes a lot of guts. I'm so happy it paid off in many ways for you.

I also love experimenting. I feel like everything I do is all part of some crazy bigger experiment. haha. I experiment with different things, like how far I'll take an idea, how raw I'll let my writing be, what kind of structure I'll use, what assumptions and biases I can do away with.

The most surprising success I had was a big fat experiment. I had mashed together two stories that were not working independently. It resulted in this wacky story that really pushed my comfort zone in terms of content. I kept wondering, can I actually write that? Turned out I could, and it got me the best responses and most meetings of any story I'd written.

I've had other experiments that died at birth. Ones that I thought might live, but didn't make it out the door. One idea in particular I still love. It's sleeping in a folder hidden away... waiting for another go in the lab.

I wholeheartedly agree with you. ALL the experiments pay off somehow. David Bowie has been in my Instagram thread a lot these days. Here's one I thought was appropriate. x
 

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Lyse you might even know these guys, but this little you tube video unlocked me once upon a time when I was blocked. I agree so much that real writing is about going outside the box, not trying to build a better, more commercial box. That only leads to yet another Marvel remake and something AI. can do as well. Thank you for your insights.

 
Great video. It's interesting, right? We seek out stories that will make us feel something. Inspire us, make us think, make us laugh. So to write that, you have to experiment, push yourself, chuck your inhibitions, and write from your gut. As they say, risk exposure and failure to do it.
 
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