I love experimenting, and playing with different forms. Last year I decided I wanted to write a piece of literary fiction that incorporated an interactive fiction form (I'll blog more about writing in this way soon). Then this last December, I just dove in and decided to do it - I started writing Raising Women. It wasn't planned; I had just finished a fiction workshop for my fall semester and had another one in the winter semester and was in the middle of writing other things, but for two weeks I just decided to write this. I knocked out most of the first draft then, then revisited it a few months later to finish it. Many rounds of editing and revising later, and I'm extremely excited to reveal the cover and announce that Raising Women will be released on October 11th! Learn more about it here. Look out for more blogs about how I wrote this, what I love about it, and other fun freebies that are coming soon.
0 Comments
PREFACE: If this is your first trip to my blog, I write a lot of transgressive fiction and my blog posts are resources for other transgressive writers. I offer book reviews, transgressive topics for inspiration, research on social change, and creative writing techniques. The article below discusses some ideas for creative writing. Welcome! A villanelle is a very structured poem made up of nineteen lines, with five tercets (three-line stanzas) followed by one quatrain (four-line stanza). Additionally, many poets use iambic pentameter (which is when a line has five sets of unstressed and stressed syllables. Each line then has a total of 10 total syllables). LitCharts provides further information and an example: “Jean Passerat's poem "Villanelle (I lost my turtledove)," [is] the first fixed-form villanelle ever written. The formal aspects of the villanelle are highlighted: the first line of the poem is repeated as a refrain at the end of the second and fourth tercets; the third line is repeated at the end of the third and fifth tercets.” For those that are more visually inclined, this is what the villanelle looks like (all the lines with A must rhyme, and all the lines with B must rhyme. Additionally, the first lines repeat as lines 6, 12, and 18 as noted by the asterisk below. Line 3 repeats and lines 9, 15, and 19 as noted by the caret below.): A * B A ^ A B A * A B A ^ A B A * A B A ^ A B A * A ^ It’s literally the same two sounds happening over and over, and two lines that get repeated multiple times. Taken from Poetry through the Ages I learned of the villanelle poem and challenged myself to write a poem in that form (which is, in fact, pretty challenging). Although I did it, and am pretty happy with it (for what it's worth), I’m not the biggest fan of writing form poetry. I'm a free verse kind of woman. I do, however, love thinking about how to apply unique form to fiction. This led me to consider the villanelle’s use of repetition in my fiction writing. I obviously wasn’t planning on rhyming or iambic pentameter-ing my story, but I could repeat an idea, or a line, instead. This forced me to consider what kind of story would be best suited to include constant repetition. Like I mention in my article “Stalking Women: Transgressive Fiction Topics” that I wrote last week, I stumbled across a docuseries on stalking that gave me an a-hah moment. Stalking is obsessive… and repetitive… this form would perfectly lend itself to the obsessive behavior a stalker has. Repeating ideas over and over and over. So I did some research on stalkers – specifically female stalkers – and after better understand who my character might realistically be, I started to plan my own fictional villanelle. This is the outline I came up with: Villanelle Form Outline A* I used to live on the tenth floor – (of the Watterson towers). B I saw you in class - you talked about the importance of words. A^ I want to see you again. A My unfriendly roommate (roommate starts conversation about mom dying and boyfriend leaving). B My window faced West. A* I used to live on the tenth floor. A Last day of class. B Thought about missing him - 'Part of me wishes I hadn't passed my test, because I would have got to spend more time with you'. A^ I want to see you again - email him. A Show boyfriend breaking up - spiral downward. B It was small, but from the tower I could see your classroom across campus. A* I used to live on the tenth floor. A You didn't answer your email that night, so sent another in the morning, two more that afternoon, and three more that night. Why are you not answering? B I found your number on the internet - and so I called. Needed to hear your voice to fall asleep. Left a voicemail. Each night for seven days - didn't sleep for a week. A^ I want to see you again. A Now I’m in my car - next to your building on campus - it's easier to see this way. It's west, but it was far. B I showed up at your house first, and threw a rock at your window - but you weren't home. Window cracked. A* I used to live on the tenth floor, but now I'm in a car waiting for you. A^ I want to see you again. Based on my research, my character was less likely to stalk a stranger, so it should be someone she knows. She was motivated by a desire to having a more intimate relationship with someone who is older. I decided to make the person she was stalking a professional who she desired being closer with after she experienced great loss in two areas of her life. On any given day, whenever I come up with story ideas, I write them in a document (I will write about this on the blog soon.) One of my random line ideas I had in this document was “I used to live on the tenth floor” which, as I was looking through the document for inspiration, I decided would be a focal point for the narrator. I also decided that part of the repetition had to be from her obsession, so “I want to see you again” became the other chorus. In traditional poetry, all the As would rhyme and Bs would rhyme. There’s nothing ‘rhyming’ about the other lines, but instead they are just scenes that help develop the story. While a different kind of difficulty, this project definitely challenged me like when I was writing the villanelle poem. These very specific parameters to write this story under forced me to be very intentional about how I structured this plot. If you're interested in working with this form for a fiction story specifically:
"I Used to Live on the Tenth Floor" is the draft I ended up writing. It was a fun exercise and I encourage you to try playing with this, or any form. Are there any unique or experimental forms you have tried? Anything you’re interested in playing with? |
I'm Shannon Waite and I write stories about norms, characters who break norms, and society's wounds. They're always contemporary, often transgressive.
Popular Posts Archives
November 2024
Categories
All
|