Saturday, February 26, 2011

Eating Alligator

No vegan here--I like meat. Steaks, chicken, pork and fish, they all spend time on my grill, but the list doesn’t stop there. I subscribe to the old expression, “When in Rome, do as the Roman’s do.”  So, when I did my tour in Vietnam, I ate whatever locals offered...variations on trash fish (carp), dog, cat and roasted rat. I even ate snake a couple of times, but I couldn’t “do” the black beetles that old peasant women sucked until it turned their teeth jet black. That was just too much for me.

The most-asked question by people who know my background was, “What does dog, cat, snake, rat...pick one...taste like?” Not to be cliché, but they really do taste like dark meat of chicken, especially dog.

Prevailing wisdom in writing advice is to “write what you know.”  Yeah, right. If you’ve never experienced it, how do you describe a main character’s reaction to eating wild boar right off a whole, roasted pig during a Hawaiian luau? Maybe common “pulled pork” would taste the same and provide similar texture, but I doubt it. I’ve got it! In the name of research, you justify a “quick” trip to Molokai to hunt wild boar with a knife and help prepare it for the fire before joining natives in a traditional feast. Then, representations of your character’s experience are realistic.

The point of this blog is that writers do not always have the opportunity to “write what they know” from real life experience. Tom Clancy never drove a submarine before writing The Hunt for Red October. Let’s say your main character is running from the law and hides in an obscure Cajun village in bayou country. Will she eat alligator when it’s offered? What does it taste like? I’ll bet it tastes like chicken! So, here you are, stopped cold in your typing-tracks, wondering what alligator tastes like. “No big deal," you think. Maybe you can write around it...make the meal catfish or bass, instead. Then, you struggle with an important story-fact as you remind yourself, “She’s supposed to fall in love with this Cajun guy whose naked chest ripples with natural muscles under deeply tanned skin." Her difficulty eating alligator was supposed to cause teasing that sparks the new relationship. What to do?

I say damn the write-what-you-know rule. Full speed ahead. The truth is, that over-used writing cliché requires a caveat...write what you know, or research the hell out of it. That’s right, research can substantially expand “what you know.” Tom Clancy’s extensive research about submarine technology and naval warfare principles astounded authorities with how realistic his scenes were. If he only wrote what he knew, his book would have been “The Hunt for Red Insurance Brokers”. Clancy's research shows what extensive study of a topic can accomplish and is a great lesson for writers. Fiction writers do not need to be trapped by “what you know”, because the extent of your “experience” is limited only by the ability to do good research. Now, I wonder if I can buy alligator locally...in the name of research, of course.

Thursday, February 17, 2011

How Do I Kill a Nice Guy?

So, I’ve got this really great character. He helps old ladies cross busy streets, stops traffic to save confused puppies, and he has even been seen giving change to a street person.

I’m thinking about killing him...in a book, of course. My story features Mr. Nice-guy as he goes through life looking after others, but I worry that such a story might be boring, so I am wondering about killing him off, you know, to add a dramatic plot twist.

Problem is, what's the best way to kill off a nice-guy? There’s always the discovery of a metastatic cancer in end stages giving him two months to live. This presents a problem...I’ve still got to write around this nice guy for another two months of story time.

How bout something more dramatic? Maybe a car crash, yeah, like hit by a drunk driver. Naw...too cliché. But, what if he was hit by a woman who couldn’t see through her tears because she just discovered her husband is bonking her best friend? Oh Lord, no! That’s too much like the romance genre that I hate.

The story follows the relationships of an old groundskeeper in an orphanage for children that are deemed not-adoptable. These kids have handicaps or behavioral problems and my nice-guy character becomes their confidant. Children find him easy to talk to and he helps them deal with life issues. For example, while he’s trimming a hedge, one small boy laments the way he is teased at school about congenital face distortions. The old man just listens while snipping at the bushes, letting the boy vent anger and hurt. When the child stops talking, the old man pulls a Tootsie-pop from his pocket and hands it to the boy. Surprised, the youngster asks, “Why did you give me this?” The old gardener says, “Because they make me smile. I hope it will give you a moment of happiness too. Try it.”

The child unwraps the sucker and smiles at the first taste of sweet chocolate flavor. When the boy looks up at the old man, the gardener explains, “As you go through life, you will always have choices. You can let mean people hurt you, or you can ignore them and take pleasure in things that make you happy...like that Tootsie-pop. It made you smile.”

Now that I think about it, maybe he’s not too boring. To live, to die...such is the trial of being a writer.