On the day this blog posts, my traveling companion and I will be trekking on what will likely be our last mountain hike of the season. We're seasonal hikers, and the weather will soon shut us down. We'll be far from the internet. I apologize in advance for my failure to reply to any comments.
We love hiking, particularly in the mountains. Without getting too woo-woo about it all, walking up and down the San Juans or the Sierra Nevadas provides a great way to reset. The Rockies require you to pay attention and to notice things. But they also offer flat meadows and lake trails when your mind can drift. I've blogged previously about how the Alpine Tunnel Trail in Colorado offered the seed for a story that Alfred Hitchcock subsequently published. My story in Murder, Neat also originated on a mountain hike. The trail didn't make it into that story, but the cold beer I was thinking about at the time did.
A recent visit to nature prompted a few writing guidelines.
1. 1. Persistence is a key.
We encountered this little tree
while walking up Engineer Mountain earlier this year. Looking at it, I wondered how many pinecones
fell upon this rock before a seedling found enough dirt to grab hold and take
root. The same tree that drops the seeds shields the rock from water and
sunlight. The overhanging pine is at once mother and foe to survival. It seems
a harsh environment in which to thrive. Yet here we found the little tree
chugging along. It would take effort to live on this barren and rocky
environment. Maybe a writer could find an inspirational message about sticking
to the task by studying this little pine, persevering until the word count is
met or the draft is finished, even if she's not feeling particularly profound
that day. Or perhaps a hiker would see a flat, shaded spot to rest after
chugging up the hill behind you. Whichever one you are, I hope you find value
in what this little guy offers.
2. 2. Practice
is essential, but clean up after yourself.
It is hard to hit a clay pigeon sailing through the air. Accurate shooting, like good writing, is a craft that needs to be practiced. In this instance, if you look in the background, a careful observer might see a line of small clay targets poised against a log. I’m deducing from the available evidence that someone was teaching their son or daughter the art of shooting here. They began with static targets before advancing their young marksman to hit them in flight. They left their litter behind, so we knew they’d been practicing.
After I got over my disappointment
at having my nature walk despoiled by a responsible/irresponsible gun owner, I considered
the lesson. Continual practice is essential to growth in any discipline,
including writing or skeet shooting. But writing necessarily includes
self-editing. Clean up after yourself. Read your manuscript critically before
hitting send. As Michael Bracken and Barb Goffman can attest, I’ve certainly
left a few empty shell casings behind on the manuscripts I’ve sent them, but
hopefully nothing that looks quite like this.
3. 3. Keep
your eye on the weather.
Never open a book with weather, Elmore Leonard famously wrote. But that doesn't mean the elements should be ignored. When hiking, weather can easily be the character that will sneak up and put you at risk or kill you. The elements are an essential character when you’re writing about the out-of-doors. Sometimes, they sneak in on cat’s feet. Other times, the weather heralds its arrival. Smart hikers know that things change when they're outside. Prudent ones study the forecast so that they have some idea about what they might encounter. Hopefully, they will take along some gear to safeguard themselves if the weather doesn't cooperate with the planned schedule.
Consider the elements when you're
writing. They present another obstacle for the protagonist to overcome in
pursuit of the goal. More broadly, the weather should remind the hiker/writer
about the importance of flexibility. I'm not a big muse guy. I think of writing
as a craft practiced with discipline rather than the whisperings of a
beautifully voiced Calliope. But I know we've all seen a story go a different
direction than the one we originally intended. When immersed in the process, a
better-than-the-original idea occasionally emerges. We follow it and end up in
a different place than originally planned. To continue the
metaphor, with preparation and flexibility, hopefully, we don't end up in a
cotton T-shirt huddled under a skinny pine seeking shelter from rain mixed with
sleet. Some who wander are lost.
4. 4. Finally, Be open for secret doors.
Doors feature prominently in
writing tips. Bernard Cornwell says he spends a lot of time putting doors
in alleys. Another recommendation is to have your character open a door when a
writer is stuck. When you do, something has to happen. The protagonist could go
through, a discovery could be observed, or something might emerge. The action
occurs at the threshold.
Sometimes, hikers find doors in
the wild. You can see this dark maw in the shadows in the center. The planned
trek was interrupted when this mine entrance appeared. Seeing it reinforced my thoughts about flexibility. The dramatic tension
built. We could go in, or something could emerge.
I'll hasten to add that we didn't
enter. We just peeked inside. Unlike fictional characters, we couldn't write
our way out of trouble if things went south. An acute case of Hantavirus is not
why I go to the mountains.
The lesson I learned from the
discovery is that secret doors really do appear. Strange things happen to us in
real life. We can tell a credible story about an incredible happening. The
challenge is for the writer to sell it.
I hope to see you on the trail
with the right gear for the elements, gathering experiences you can spin into
stories or, perhaps, seeing the rules for writing stories displayed in the
natural surroundings.
Until next time.
Hope you had a great hike, Mark! I used to hike the Appalachian Trail regularly back when I was living in Atlanta. Not the Rockies, but filled with beauty, challenges, and a darned good setting for a mystery or two.
ReplyDeleteI was a regular on hiking trails (until a car accident) and you bring it all back, Mark! I loved your comparison to doors - doors in the wild. Melodie
ReplyDelete