Wazha Lopang |
On
Saturday 1 August writers came together at Maruapula School (thanks for the
room, MAP!) for the Bessie Head Heritage Trust (BHHT) short story workshop. It
was a one-day event packed with information for writers. The objective was to
improve the quality of the submissions for the Bessie Head Short Story Award
later this year.
Writers
around the country were asked to submit a 500 word story if they were
interested in attending the workshop. From there twenty-two writers were
chosen. Sadly, of the twenty-two only ten managed to attend, but at least those
ten seemed committed to writing and improving their stories. I hope we’ll find
their names among the winners later this year.
The
facilitators were three past Bessie Head Literature Award winners: Wazha
Lopang, Wame Molefhe, and me. Topics covered included: what makes a story a
story, show don’t tell, point of view, tips for writing stories and the
importance of reading, building tension, and writing realistic dialogue. The
guidelines for this year’s contest were discussed by Trust member, Dr Mary
Lederer.
Wame
Molefhe explained that presenting facts is telling, but showing in your stories
is the real challenge. When writers are able to show the reader what they see
in their mind, the reader will stay interested. A story that is all telling is
a boring story. She used Unity Dow’s novel Far and Beyond to give examples of
how a writer writes so as to show. She gave participants a writing exercise
where they had to describe an angry man and a beautiful woman without using
those adjectives and instead getting the reader to see and come to the
conclusion that the character is either angry or beautiful.
Wazha
Lopang taught the group about point of view and why a writer chooses one point
of view over another to tell their story. Choosing between first person, second
person, or the various types of third person will depend on how you want to
tell your story. He explained how each point of view puts restrictions on the
writer. For example, if you choose first person and the narrator is an eight
year old boy, you cannot expect him to know the intricacies of a car’s
carburettor.
Wame
Molefhe warned the participants not to use dialogue as an information dump. The
people talking already know things about each other. For example if two friends
are talking, a clumsy writer might want to get in the information about how
they became friends through a conversation. If one of the friends says in a
normal conversation- “When we became friends in standard one, when we were
seven and living in Serowe.” – that would be an unrealistic conversation and a
good example of an information dump.
Molefhe
also spoke about how dialogue is punctuated, which was quite important since
many writers are unsure about the punctuation around dialogue and tend to leave
it out of their stories because of that fear, making the stories worse for it.
She gave pointers on the use of dialogue tags (i.e. he said, she asked, he
whimpered, etc.) which again was very useful.
Lopang
gave a list of ways to build tension into your stories. Dramatic tension is
what keeps readers interested in the story, without it they will stop reading.
Some of the things Lopang mentioned were sentence length (short sentences up
the tension), the manipulation of time, repetition, italics, and the weighing
of options by the character. When manipulating time, meaning cutting back in
time at the peak of a dramatic scene, a writer can leave the reader wanting to
know what happens. He also explained how repeating a phrase or italicising it
can also create tension. He gave the example of a person coming home and
finding their front door open. You might write: The door is open. What could
that mean? The door is open. Or: the door
is open. Either option emphasises the fear in the character’s head and ups
the tension for the reader.
Mary
Lederer explained the guidelines for the contest this year. It is only for short
stories, unlike in the past. The prizes are being sponsored by Diamond
Educational Publishers. The deadline for the submissions (which can only be
done by email) is 15 September. All details for the contest can be found here.
No comments:
Post a Comment