Austen, Speare, or Something Else? Choosing a Mentor Novel

Novelists out there: Ever been asked to choose a “mentor” novel?

The intensive novel writing class I begin soon requires that I choose a mentor novel.  This is a novel that I have already read and loved for its style, genre, tone, plotting, humor, language, or whatever reason, and wish to emulate in some way.

Question is, what to choose?  What novels are educative for the writer learning her craft?

I can say what will not work.  My preference might be the Eliots and Tolstoys, but Middlemarch and War and Peace wouldn’t make good mentor novels.  At least, good mentor novels for the likes of me.  Why?  They are too long and too complex.  Normally, as a reader, I would consider these to be good qualities in a novel.  Who doesn’t love delving into the delightful complexities of an epic masterpiece?  But they fail as mentor novels because a writer would be hard-pressed to get their minds around the structure of those books.  And getting our minds around the structure of a book is what having a mentor novel is all about.

That being said, I’m toying with two novels right now:  Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice and The Witch of Blackbird Pond by Elizabeth George Speare.

Pride and Prejudice is an easy, obvious choice.  I love Austen’s novels and I know them well (maybe a little too well). She’s a master at characterization, and emulating her would also help me achieve my near-impossible goal of being funny (considering that I’ve boldly opined on the lack of humor in new Catholic literature).  Perhaps, with Austen’s help, I’ll dream up another Mr. Collins?

Pinched from here.

Pinched from here.

One can only hope.

My one objection to using Pride and Prejudice is that it’s everyone’s mentor novel.  Need proof?  The Elizabeth Theory.  Contemporary fiction has way, way too many Elizabeth knockoffs.   Other than Shakespeare’s Beatrice (Much Ado About Nothing), I cannot think of a single female literary character prior to P&P with the temperament and talent of an Elizabeth Bennett.  She became a type when she arrived on the scene – a beloved and much imitated type – and since then our female characters are measured according to the Pride and Prejudice standard.

My more pressing goal, however, is to work on plotting, and for that I can think of no better example than the Newbury Award winning novel The Witch of Blackbird Pond That Disney hasn’t already turned it into a movie is surprising, considering its vast popularity with fifth-grade teachers.  It’s a compelling and tightly written story set in colonial Connecticut, and the opening chapters are near perfection in its hook, establishment of the premise, characterization, scene structure, and foreshadowing. And, being a children’s story, the plot is easier to analyze.  Kit is another Elizabeth Bennett type, of course, but otherwise it’d be a great book to imitate.

How about you?  What novel (or book, for you non-fiction writers) would you choose as a mentor novel, and why?

Writer’s Notebook, 11/27/12: Opposite Day! And a Few Resources

I mentioned in a recent Writer’s Notebook update that I had given up on writing the novel and turned to a non-fiction project.  That I had hit the end of my innate abilities and was waiting for school to start.  That this non-fiction project finally had context and relevancy and that it was time for it to begin.

I told the truth, but it’s also possible that I had a case of writer’s block.  In any case, I had a breakthrough the other day regarding the novel, meaning that I’m back at it again.

The novel has two main characters – two sisters, to be precise.  The older sister, Lisa, is lovable and lovely but a real piece of cuckoo! work underneath her outer shell of rational and religious sensibilities. In my early morning mental ramblings the other day, between dreamland and wakey-time, I understood that her reaction to the premise of the plot was not what I thought it was.

In fact, it’s practically the opposite.

Opposite!

You don’t have to be a storyteller to realize how that changes everything.  Though, fortuitously, it does bring the plot line back around to my original conception, over a year ago.  At least I’m not starting from scratch.

Also fortuitous is the renewed desire this realization has given me to get back to work.  Bless my soul, now I have two active projects going, if you don’t count blogging.  Perhaps, someday (please, Lord?), I’ll finish one of them.  Finis, The End, All’s Well That Ends Well, Q.E.D.  It’d sure be nice.

Feeling refreshed, my first stop was to the ever-helpful blog Wordplay: Helping Writers Become Authors, hosted by author K.M. Weiland.  My foremost burning question at this point is How on earth do I outline a novel? Because I’m sure spinning my wheels, writing a ton of copy that I’m going to set aside and probably never use.

(If you’re tuning in for the first time, you must know that I don’t know what the begeebers I’m doing.)

It seems like a simple enough question to answer, but, turns out, not so much.  I figured Weiland would have an answer, and she did… in the form of a book.  That’s how much one can say about the benefits and methods of outlining.

So, there’s that.  I’ll read her book and start outlining the (let’s not curse now!) thing.

With regards non-fiction, one of the best resources I’ve found for writers is Jeff Goins. He has a motivational + marketing savvy ethos which I actually appreciate a lot.  I need help staying motivated to write and being diligent, and I’ll need help with the business side of writing.  Other people are good at it and those people tell people like me what to do.

What impresses me is that Jeff Goins holds down a full-time job in addition to all this writing he does.   He acknowledged in one of his talks that he makes about $3,500/month from his Kindle sales.  Apparently it’s enough to allow his wife to stay at home with their son, but not quite enough to quit his 9-to-5 gig — and perhaps he doesn’t want to quit.  How would I know?  Anyway, here at A Naptime Novelist, we applaud people who manage to do this crazy writing thing in odd circumstances and at odd times.  I admire his work ethic and envy his word counts.

Worst of all, now I have no excuse for not getting both the fic and non-fic projects done.  Gee, thanks, Mr. Goins.

Easy Jane Austen Trivia

…inspired by this morning’s breakfast:

What about this morning’s breakfast reminds me of Jane Austen?

Answer correctly and fame and fortune will be yours!*

 

 

*Not really.

7 Quick Takes: Back to Taking Quick Takes

1.  This is my first 7 Quick Takes in a month.  It’s good to be back!

2. Somehow, in the midst of moving chaos, I’m finding time to read a novel. Perhaps it’s not surprising – reading is such a good way to unwind, as everyone knows.  I’m almost finished with Robertson Davies’ The Cunning Man.

Robertson Davies (Wikicommons)

After discovering that I have an interest in all things Canadian, my husband’s Welsh-turned-Canadian colleague recommended I check out Davies, a Canadian author.  The local library had two of his novels, and, from the jacket, The Cunning Man was the one that piqued my interest.

First impressions? I’m engaged.  I took the hook, and now the line is pulling me in all the way to the end of the book.

Themes?  Eh…  not sure if they are my cup of tea. Particularly the theme of sex.

While the narrator, Dr. Jonathan Hullah, can articulate that modern man thinks falsely that Sex is a God, it disproportionally governs his understanding and his portrayal of other characters.

No sex scenes, but just too much talk about sex for my taste.  I suppose I prefer that it remain in the subtext of a story – there, a part of the action, but left modestly to the privacy of the radiant, glorious nuptial bed.  Thus says the loyal reader of Jane Austen.

3. To all the well-wishers regarding our Maryland friends:  Thank you.  Check out Rebecca Teti’s beautiful post at Faith & Family about the parish’s response.  Anyone who’s been fortunately enough to have passed through the neighborhood understands how special it really is.  We miss you guys.  And please keep praying for the family.

4.  Curtains.  We need curtains.  Every time The Boy opens the bathroom door whilst occupied, I think, “We need curtains.”  Any suggestions for buying curtains online?  We have historic, and therefore irregularly sized, windows, and I need to shop somewhere with greater variety of sizes.  I have zero interest in getting my sewing machine out right now.

5.  I suppose we need a lock for the bathroom, too.

6.  Ever been to Holland?  Holland, Michigan, that is.  That’s where we live now, and, as you might have guessed, there’s quite a bit of talk about “The Dutch” around here.  Now, our parish is pretty diverse – it offers Mass in Spanish and Vietnamese – but the proliferation of all things and all people Dutch around here is impressive.  A lot of “Van Der [fill in the blank]” names, with plenty of Vs and Zs and extra vowels to go around.

I keep hearing rumors about the way the Dutch keep house (immaculately), and I’ve already made a vow that I would not compare my own housekeeping with them.  Which I promptly did, all in my imagination.  I’m crazy like that.

I’ll be filling you in more about Holland as I learn more.  So far, I love it.  Especially the farmer’s market.

7.  The Boy’s a bit under the weather, so I’m cutting this off here.  Have a blessed Friday!  And check out the other Quick Takes at Conversion Diary.

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