Unplotted Novels

Status
Not open for further replies.

sunandshadow

Impractical Fantasy Animal
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Apr 17, 2005
Messages
4,827
Reaction score
336
Location
Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Website
home.comcast.net
Generally I've heard tight plotting extolled as a universal virtue. But some books I've liked a lot haven't had much plot - Gene Wolfe's Book of the New Sun quartet, for example. Paul Park's Sugar Rain trilogy for another example. So I just wondered, does anyone here think a strong plot is not necessarily a virtue in a book?
 

Mistook

Neverending WIP
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 12, 2005
Messages
882
Reaction score
65
Location
Aurora, Illinois.
Website
www.myspace.com
sunandshadow said:
Generally I've heard tight plotting extolled as a universal virtue. But some books I've liked a lot haven't had much plot - Gene Wolfe's Book of the New Sun quartet, for example. Paul Park's Sugar Rain trilogy for another example. So I just wondered, does anyone here think a strong plot is not necessarily a virtue in a book?


I can say I'm starting to run into problems with the plot taking over my story and leaving no room for character development. Plot is good, but I'm beginning to understand how too much can be a bad thing.
 

Jamesaritchie

Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 13, 2005
Messages
27,863
Reaction score
2,313
PLot

sunandshadow said:
So I just wondered, does anyone here think a strong plot is not necessarily a virtue in a book?

I wouldn't quite word it this way. I think a strong plot is always a good thing, but this doesn't mean a book necessarily needs a strong plot to sell, or even to be good. The plot has to fit the story.

It other words, I'd say a strong plot is always a virtue, it just isn't always a needed virtue.
 

scribbler1382

Write For You, Edit For The Reader
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Mar 10, 2005
Messages
1,429
Reaction score
161
Location
Toronto
Website
www.soderstrom.ca
It may also be useful to point out the difference in using "plot" as a verb or a noun. There's a difference between a book being "plotted" and a book having a "plot". To me, anyways. I know of a lot of books that were intricately plotted, which have none. And there's equally a good number of books that were written stream-of-consciousness style which have incredibly strong plots. Neither of these approaches are an indicator of whether a book is good or not, IMO.

Sometimes when you look at a table covered with a dish's ingredients you think "there's no way that's going to be edible" even when they tell you how all the pieces are going to go together, and yet when it's finished and you put that first forkful in your mouth, your knees go weak. So then the question becomes, is it the recipe or the cook that made it good?
 

sunandshadow

Impractical Fantasy Animal
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Apr 17, 2005
Messages
4,827
Reaction score
336
Location
Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Website
home.comcast.net
I was using plot as a noun, because if we're talking about finished novels we don't know exactly how they were created, and it is irrelevant to evaluating the content and quality of the finished book. I want to know about published, finished books which have little or no plot and are perfectly good that way.
 

Jamesaritchie

Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 13, 2005
Messages
27,863
Reaction score
2,313
sunandshadow said:
I was using plot as a noun, because if we're talking about finished novels we don't know exactly how they were created, and it is irrelevant to evaluating the content and quality of the finished book. I want to know about published, finished books which have little or no plot and are perfectly good that way.

Most published novels do have a fairly solid plot, even if it's not one full of action and adventure. A novel must be about something, must have a storyline, and if there's a storyline, there's a plot.

I don't think Gene Wolfe's Book of the New Sun is light on plot in any way. That's an extremely complicated series of books, and must be read two or three times to get anywhere near the full meaning, or the full plot. But the plot is clearly there, and pretty darned complicated.

I haven't read Sugar Rain, but if it has little or no plot, this may be why it's out of print.
 

sunandshadow

Impractical Fantasy Animal
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Apr 17, 2005
Messages
4,827
Reaction score
336
Location
Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Website
home.comcast.net
The plot in Book of the New Sun was complicated, but I certainly wouldn't call it tight, would you? It seemed very sprawling and un-unified to me. There were lots of scenes that didn't contribute at all to the build toward the climax, and lots of loose ends which got forgotten rather than tied up...
 

hoyateach

Dancing with limbo sticks
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Mar 3, 2005
Messages
69
Reaction score
4
Thomas Hardy (I think it was) once said (wrote?) that the characters, once fleshed out, tended to dictate the course of the novel themselves. I've found in my own writing that if I take sufficient care in establishing who everyone is and what their motivations are, I can throw a successive string of situations at them and the story will emerge from that.

Once on paper, the editing begins and the "true" novel emerges.
 

sunandshadow

Impractical Fantasy Animal
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Apr 17, 2005
Messages
4,827
Reaction score
336
Location
Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Website
home.comcast.net
hoyateach said:
Thomas Hardy (I think it was) once said (wrote?) that the characters, once fleshed out, tended to dictate the course of the novel themselves. I've found in my own writing that if I take sufficient care in establishing who everyone is and what their motivations are, I can throw a successive string of situations at them and the story will emerge from that.

Once on paper, the editing begins and the "true" novel emerges.

Wouldn't you consider that "successive string of situations" to be plot?
 

triceretops

Banned
Flounced
Joined
Feb 12, 2005
Messages
14,060
Reaction score
2,755
Location
In a van down by the river
Website
guerrillawarfareforwriters.blogspot.com
"I can say I'm starting to run into problems with the plot taking over my story and leaving no room for character development. Plot is good, but I'm beginning to understand how too much can be a bad thing."

This is one of my problems. I've sacrificed a great deal of characterization for intricate plot design. I'm compelled to go back into the finished novel and beef up my people.

Tri
 

Jamesaritchie

Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 13, 2005
Messages
27,863
Reaction score
2,313
sunandshadow said:
The plot in Book of the New Sun was complicated, but I certainly wouldn't call it tight, would you? It seemed very sprawling and un-unified to me. There were lots of scenes that didn't contribute at all to the build toward the climax, and lots of loose ends which got forgotten rather than tied up...

No, I don't think I'd call it tight. It was very sprawling. But I also wouldnt say the plot was slight or non-existent. There's a lot of plot, and several sub-plots. I'm not sure you can have a really tight plot in a quadrilogy, or that you would want one. Tight plots are genrally associated with shorter novels.

But I also don't think there were really any loose ends, or scenes that didn't contributes. For me, every scene contributed to the novel, and had a reason for being. An dyuo do have to read that series two or three times to get the full meaning of everything.

I don't even like the idea of having every scene contribute to the build up to climax. Scenes have many uses, including character development, sub-plot development, and verisimilitude. Having every scene build toward the climax can work well in a fairly short novel, but longer snovels need to do more with scene and plot, and trilogies or quadrilogies need to do more still.
 

loquax

I verb nouns adverbly
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Jun 5, 2005
Messages
1,064
Reaction score
165
triceretops said:
This is one of my problems. I've sacrificed a great deal of characterization for intricate plot design. I'm compelled to go back into the finished novel and beef up my people.

This is the way I'm doing it. I would much rather concentrate on the plot and go back to strengthen the characters than the other way round. If you write a book and neglect the plot, I would imagine it's darned hard to rectify.
 

zornhau

Swordsman
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 21, 2005
Messages
1,491
Reaction score
167
Location
Scotland
Website
www.livejournal.com
loquax said:
This is the way I'm doing it. I would much rather concentrate on the plot and go back to strengthen the characters than the other way round. If you write a book and neglect the plot, I would imagine it's darned hard to rectify.

Also, character doesn't mean much without action to demonstrate it. Where you have action, you have plot.

As I recall, Book of the New Sun does have a plot, but it's about the milieu rather than the character's struggle. Milieu novels have a very different story question from - say - thrillers, and the author has liesure to provide the answer in a rambling way.
 

zarch

GOML.
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Jun 28, 2005
Messages
333
Reaction score
38
Location
Texas
In my mind, the most important element of any book is language. In other words, does the writer

A) have a strong grasp of conventions?
B) effectively use dialogue and dialect?
C) use seamless transitions?

A good plot is doomed with poor language, and an average plot can be overlooked if the writer has a fair grasp of dialect and the mechanics of writing character dialogue. An editor can only do so much. The writer must be a good manipulator of language.
 

zornhau

Swordsman
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 21, 2005
Messages
1,491
Reaction score
167
Location
Scotland
Website
www.livejournal.com
>The writer must be a good manipulator of language.

Disagree. There are plenty of gripping books out there which are actually badly written. Plot uber alles.
 

zarch

GOML.
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Jun 28, 2005
Messages
333
Reaction score
38
Location
Texas
Zornhau, you say "There are plenty of gripping books out there which are actually badly written."

Sure, but I'm talking about good books, not gripping books. Those aren't always the same. I stand by this (and of course it's purely my opinion): a good writer has command of language.
 

zornhau

Swordsman
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 21, 2005
Messages
1,491
Reaction score
167
Location
Scotland
Website
www.livejournal.com
Ah. Now I see we have a problem of definition.

My definition of a good books is one which people are prepared to pay money to read.
 

zarch

GOML.
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Jun 28, 2005
Messages
333
Reaction score
38
Location
Texas
And I suppose your definition is probably best! Sorry, the English teacher in me must have been speaking previously!
 

zornhau

Swordsman
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 21, 2005
Messages
1,491
Reaction score
167
Location
Scotland
Website
www.livejournal.com
The English Teacher in you evidently doesn't care about getting published!:)

Seriously, though, I don't think there can be an objective measure of "good" for fiction. A book has to be measured against its purpose. I would say that, e.g. Kustler's Dirk Pitt books lack depth, and probably won't have much longevity, but that they are good adventure yarns.
 

zarch

GOML.
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Jun 28, 2005
Messages
333
Reaction score
38
Location
Texas
You're right--I don't suppose there is a universal working definition of what "good" literature is. But when I look at the lasting writing of the past, say, five hundred years, I see names of writers who are often quoted. Shakespeare, Dickens, Twain, Angelou, Morrison, etc. We quote them often because their words resonate. The reason the words resonate? Because they sound good.

I understand your point about marketable books and the fact that they must be gripping. Few fiction readers pay big money to sit around and read pretty langauge that doesn't tell a story.

And yes, the English teacher side of me longs to see my name on the cover of a book :) .....we shall see.....
 

Jamesaritchie

Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 13, 2005
Messages
27,863
Reaction score
2,313
Language

zarch said:
In my mind, the most important element of any book is language. In other words, does the writer

A) have a strong grasp of conventions?
B) effectively use dialogue and dialect?
C) use seamless transitions?

A good plot is doomed with poor language, and an average plot can be overlooked if the writer has a fair grasp of dialect and the mechanics of writing character dialogue. An editor can only do so much. The writer must be a good manipulator of language.

A good plot may be ruined with poor langauge, but I don't think poor language ruins a good story.

I do, however, think books that stand the test of time, as opposed to books that may be bestsellers, but then disappear, usually do have good use of language.

But then you have to ask what good use of langauge is. I believe it's langauge that fits the characters and the story perfectly. I don't think anyone would say that Mark Twain used beautiful language in Huckleberry Finn, but he did use language that fit the characters and the story perfectly. No other language would have worked as well.

Ray Bradbury uses langauge as well as any living writer, but again, it fits the kind of tales he tells, and the kind of people he writes about. Bradbury couldn't have written Huckleberry Finn, and Twain couldn't have written Fahrenheit 451, at least not in the same, perfect way.

Use of langauge does not have to be very good to sell a novel, even one that stays on the bestseller list forever. Look at "The Bridges of Madison County" or "The da Vinci Code." Story alone carries both these books.

But there's not a thing in the world wrong with getting all the parts of a novel perfect, including use of langauge.
 

sunandshadow

Impractical Fantasy Animal
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Apr 17, 2005
Messages
4,827
Reaction score
336
Location
Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Website
home.comcast.net
So what exactly is a milieu novel, and what sort of story question does it have? Would a regency romance or other historical fiction likely be a milieu novel? Because if so, what I'm writing probably is. Googling this term, it seems like they usualy have a journey. Does it have to have a journey? What would a milieu novel without the journey be?

I'm not personally worried about language because my voice/readability is the one thing I always get complements on. :banana: It's just my plotting that's lousy. :Smack:
 
Last edited:

sunandshadow

Impractical Fantasy Animal
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Apr 17, 2005
Messages
4,827
Reaction score
336
Location
Pittsburgh, PA, USA
Website
home.comcast.net
Kiva Wolfe said:
My first question would be, what is an unplotted novel?

Well, here's what author Damon Knight has to say on the subject:

[size=+1]Unplotted Stories
[/size]

A plotted story has a skeletal structure that can be extracted and examined; the story makes sense if you just tell what happens in it. This is not true of unplotted stories. Consider, for example, Ernest Hemingway's "Big Two-Hearted River." It is easy to say what happens in this story. The narrator gets off a train in a deserted countryside and walks deep into the forest, where he makes camp and goes to sleep. In the morning he catches grasshoppers for bait, has breakfast, and fishes the river. He catches trout and cleans them. This account could be expanded by adding detail, but even if it included every least thing that happens, it would not tell you what the story means.

The strength of "Big Two-Hearted River" lies partly in its symbolism (the river is the narrator's life, and he is fishing the upper part of it, which represents the lost paradise of his boyhood), but there are powerful unplotted stories in which symbolism plays no part. Tolstoy's "The Death of Ivan Ilych" is simply the chronicle of a man's life; the same can be said of Willa Cather's "Good Neighbor Rosicky." In these stories we are profoundly moved, not by drama, but by the inner meaning of a human being's existence. These are stories of illumination rather than of revelation; they take the form, "This is what life is."
 

zornhau

Swordsman
Super Member
Registered
Joined
Feb 21, 2005
Messages
1,491
Reaction score
167
Location
Scotland
Website
www.livejournal.com
sunandshadow said:
So what exactly is a milieu novel, and what sort of story question does it have? Would a regency romance or other historical fiction likely be a milieu novel? Because if so, what I'm writing probably is. Googling this term, it seems like they usualy have a journey. Does it have to have a journey? What would a milieu novel without the journey be?
:Smack:

"Milieu Novel" as defined by Orson Scott Card - as I recall - is a novel which is more about the world or setting than the actual adventures of the characters.

The character adventures serve to reveal the world, and if well constructed, hinge on critical aspects of that world.

Typical examples would be Gormenghast and possibly the Kushiel's Dart series, and perhaps some classic detective fiction. Also, Jack Vance's Cugel sequence, and Hitchikers Guide to the Galaxy.

A milieu novel without a physical journey might still have a mental or emotional journey, it all depends on how the author choses to show us the world.

As for Story Question... I haven't studied this form overmuch because I'm not really keen on it. I suspect that the main Story Question can - but need not -
  • Be answered without the characters being the wiser
  • Relate to the mysterious workings of the world
  • Require scenes which have no impact on the POV character's story
So for instance, "Are all politicians really as corrupt as they look?", "What is it that keeps the Elves from leaving the Unicorn Woods?", or even, for the more gently rambling edifice, "What's going on here, then?"

Vance and Adams often seem to have questions such as "Just how whacky is this world?"

Indicators for a possible milieu novel include:
  • Lots of pointless but strangely compelling picturesque scenes and detail
  • Character adventures end with a decision to stay or go.
I think a lot of beginner SF wannabes make the mistake of deploying milieu novel techniques regardless of what kind of story they're writing
 
Status
Not open for further replies.