“I
have a hard job. As a writer my tools are 26 letters. These letters are formed
into words that must be arranged into original sentences in such a way to entice
someone to buy what has been written.” This was the opening statement in a talk
I gave many years ago. The audience responded with, “What’s hard about that?”
One
might smirk, nod with agreement, disagree, ponder, or reconsider. There are
many ways to comprehend both statement and response.
In
the preface of his book, The Story of
Ain’t, David Skinner writes, “Language is the ultimate committee product.
The committee is always in session and, for good and bad, every speaker is a
member of the committee.” After reading these words and, later the whole book,
I was struck by profound loss. Why would I have such an emotional response about
the creation of the dictionary, Webster’s
Third? Because I realized that when my debut novel, Burden of Truth, is released in January it will no longer belong to
me.
The
page is the final resting place of an author’s vision for those 26 letters.
Once there, it belongs to the readers. To society at large. Each one will shape
the meaning of the words. Starting in elementary school, American children are
continually tested on this concept as their education progresses. It’s called
comprehension. How well do you understand what has been written?
A character
of mine has been called a pedophile. Not true by definition or action. And it
forced me to dwell on how complicated comprehension actually is. How does one
person see tragic love and another see a menace? They are reading the same
words in the same order. What is inferred between the lines? What history influences
the reading?
Authors
should make no apologies for their characters. Nor should they be forced to.
They are who they are: imperfect, heroes, compromised, traitors, morally
suspect, difficult, talented, naughty, evil, murderous, and everything in
between. In the end, that’s what drives compelling fiction. It sparks the
imagination.
But
how should an author feel when a reader misses the comprehension mark? Should
we care? After all, it no longer belongs to us. RIP. But what if the reader makes
a public statement about the work that is misleading? Or false? Or has the
potential to damage sales or turn off other readers? Will the comment be
regarded as judgmental opinion or literary criticism? At one time, the borders
weren’t smudged. Nowadays, a love of reading seems sufficient enough
qualification to post in any format. Lots of questions, no tidy answers.
The
way writers and readers approach a work and, more broadly, language, is unique
to each of us. Personal experiences, prejudices, literacy, gender, mood, temperament,
even haste, all effect how a work is perceived. That’s the magic of this
business. It’s what makes writing and reading so enjoyable, so engage-able. And
yes, frustrating, too.
My
job is done. The work has been laid to rest. Comprehend away.
P.S.
The audience in the first paragraph was a classroom of kids.
2 comments:
Hi Terri,
Welcome to InkSpot, and what a thoughtful post! It's always very interesting to me when readers "comprehend" something in one of my novels that I didn't consciously insert in the writing. Sometimes, I realize my subconscious was at work on that theme. Other times, I think the reader was processing some issue in their own life that they used the book to gain some insight into. In either case, it's magic!
Hi Terri,
Congratulations on your release. The tired cliche about our books as children is appropriate. You've done what you can, released them to the world, now just love them and try not to judge. Detach, detach, detach!
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