By B.K. Stevens
“Write from experience,” experts tell
us. That might be helpful advice if you’re an international spy or someone
who’s survived twelve divorces and found true love at last. Those of us who lead quieter lives might be
out of luck—unless we take a closer look at the word “experience.”
The best advice for writers I’ve ever
found comes from an 1884 essay called “The Art of Fiction” by Henry James,
author of such classics as Portrait of a
Lady and The Ambassadors. It’s
good advice not only for fiction writers but also for nonfiction writers, playwrights,
poets, all writers. James agrees we
should write from experience but thinks “experience” should be defined broadly
enough to include our observations, impressions, and insights. Experience, he says, is “a kind of huge
spider-web of the finest silken threads suspended in the chamber of
consciousness, and catching every airborne particle in its tissue.” “When the
mind is imaginative,” he says, “it takes to itself the faintest hints of life,
it converts the very pulses of the air into revelations.” So we don’t need to
live glamorous, adventurous lives to have experiences worth writing about. But
we do need to make sure no sliver of useful experience slips past us—or, as
James far more memorably puts it, “Try to be one of the people on whom nothing
is lost!”
How does that work? Here’s a quick
example. Years ago, when my husband and I were having dinner at a restaurant, I
noticed an elderly man sitting alone at a table,
going through a strange little ritual. He took a sip of his martini, then splashed
a few drops from his water glass into his martini glass. Another sip, another
splash—he kept it up until both glasses were empty. When a waitress brought him
soup and a roll, he wrapped the roll in a napkin and stuffed it in his pocket;
when she brought him a sandwich and coffee, he wrapped up the sandwich and
stuffed that in his pocket, too. He was
still drinking coffee, slowly, and looking around the room when we left.
In the following days, I found
myself thinking about that man, about the martini-and-water ritual, about the
careful wrapping and saving of food. There must be a story there, I thought. So
I made one up. “Table for None” was first published in Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine in 2008 and now appears again
in my short story collection, Her
Infinite Variety: Tales of Women and Crime.
We
can’t let any hint of a story (or poem, article, or play) escape us. Whether we’re
chatting with friends, dealing with a client, or taking the dog for a walk, we
should be on the lookout for possibilities. Those possibilities will seldom, if
ever, be complete stories, but we can take “the faintest hints of life” and use
our imaginations to transform them into something wonderful. The crucial step
is to “Try to be one of the people on whom nothing is lost!”
_______________________________________________________________
B.K. (Bonnie) Stevens has published
over fifty short stories, most of them in Alfred
Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine. She has also published stories in magazines
such as Woman’s World and Family Circle, as well as in several
anthologies. Her stories have been nominated for major mystery awards such as
the Agatha (three nominations), the Anthony (one nomination), the Macavity (two
nominations), and the Derringer (three nominations, one award). Also, one of
her stories won first prize in a national suspense-writing contest judged by
Mary Higgins Clark. Eleven of her stories are included in her 2016 collection, Her
Infinite Variety: Tales of Women and Crime (Wildside Press). She has also
published two novels. Fighting Chance (Poisoned Pen Press; Agatha and
Anthony nominations for Best Young Adult Novel) is a martial arts mystery set
in central Virginia. Interpretation of Murder (Black Opal Books) is a
traditional whodunit offering readers insights into Deaf culture and
sign-language interpreting. B.K. has also published an e-novella with Untreed
Reads, articles in The Writer and The Third Degree, two college textbooks
with Holt/Harcourt Brace, and a book on Jewish education with Behrman House.
She was an English professor for over thirty years and often taught classes in
writing, including creative writing. She and her husband have two grown
daughters and live in Hampden-Sydney, Virginia with their self-satisfied cat. Website:
www.bkstevensmysteries.com
Amazon
author page: https://www.amazon.com/author/bkstevens
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