I was invited to submit a story to an anthology, and there were specific requirements for setting and length. But writing it, I was reminded yet again that you really can accomplish more with less. There are economies of scale in every endeavor, modest or grand.
An
illustration.
If
you’ve seen the Russell Crowe version of 3:10
to
The story I wrote, titled “Shuffle Off to Buffalo,” is in fact about a couple of guys waiting for a train, and I kept circling back to 3:10 to Yuma, not because I wanted to conjure it up, particularly, but because I was after that economy. You didn’t need an encyclopedic back story, if you have the odd convincing detail. I wasn’t even sure you needed to know why they were waiting. Was it enough that you (and they) understood it was necessary? I decided that was a little too artful,
I also used another piece of tried-and-true, courtesy of Raymond Chandler. If in doubt, have a guy come through the door with a gun. I wasn’t in doubt or at a loss, by any means, but I needed a catalyst, and the shortest distance between two points was a gunfight. I was spare with detail here, as well. It took all of five lines.
Another thing is that many of the Mickey Counihan stories, of which this is one, have a reverse at the end. Not necessarily a twist, or an O. Henry, but a deadpan finish, a throwaway line by Mickey that turns the story back on itself. Mark Billingham – who started out doing stand-up – once remarked that writing suspense has a lot in common with a comedy routine. There’s a set-up and a punchline, and in both cases, the punchline depends on the reversal of expectations.
Lastly, you simply get a lot of satisfaction from stripping out the inessential. Not that you shouldn’t drift into eddies and pools, or allow for moments of stillness. It’s often its own reward, for me, the grace note, the dropped stitch, something caught out of the corner of your eye, but in this instance, there were no DVD extras.