Thursday 26 February 2015

Returning to simplicity

I'm a big fan of simple storytelling.  But while I've been researching SF short story markets I've come across several magazines that want 'leading edge' and 'experimental' fiction, whatever they are.  Or 'stories that play with form and expectations', whatever that means.

The thing is, a story only is a story if it has a recogniseable structure.  Basically, it needs a boring old beginning, middle, and end.  That's very old-fashioned, I know, but plot is driven by event/action/result/new event/action/result.  The tests and challenges pile up and get steadily harder while we wonder how our heroine is going to overcome this latest impossible challenge.

The very simplicity of simple storytelling structure hides the power of effortless storytelling.  This is particularly so in young adult SF.  There you'll find fast-paced, logical stories, but you'll also find strong SF ideas being well worked out. Which is more than can be said for some of the adult SF stories I've read.  Some of these seem no more than a mish-mash of clever scenes cobbled together with no narrative thread, no obvious connection, and sometimes no obvious storytelling purpose.  They're the sort of thing beginner writers produce thirty years before they learn to write a story.

Perhaps that's why I love YA quest stories.  The little child inside me wants to go on a adventure, wants to face danger (but in a controlled way), wants to struggle alongside the hero/heroine (but not too much.). That's why I wrote my own YA novels The Code River, Geneship, and Auroradawn.  These characters are all people on a quest to find the truth.

To me, far too many adult SF novels are too complex.  They have several viewpoints, jumps in time, alternating first person viewpoints that don't identity the viewpoint character.  All this clutter gets in the way of telling a good story.  Maybe that's why Anne McCaffrey is one of my favourite authors.  Among young adult writers I like Scott Westerfeld, Teri Terri, Anthony Horowitz. All these books have fabulous and hard-hitting ideas, but great storytelling too.  Statistics tell us that more adults than young adults read YA books.  Maybe the simple storytelling is one reason why.

It's time we followed YA's lead in adult SF.  It's time to focus on good old fashioned storytelling, putting over our dazzling ideas without pretentious forms of writing.  And if we returned to simple storytelling maybe more adults would be drawn to SF stories.  Maybe, just maybe, the genre would go mainstream.

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