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The Secret Miracle: The Novelist's Handbook [Paperback]

Daniel Alarcon
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)

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Book Description

April 13, 2010

The world’s best contemporary writers—from Michael Chabon and Claire Messud to Jonathan Lethem and Amy Tan—engage in a wide-ranging, insightful, and oft- surprising roundtable discussion on the art of writing fiction

Drawing back the curtain on the mysterious process of writing novels, The Secret Miracle brings together the foremost practitioners of the craft to discuss how they write. Paul Auster, Roddy Doyle, Allegra Goodman, Aleksandar Hemon, Mario Vargas Llosa, Susan Minot, Rick Moody, Haruki Murakami, George Pelecanos, Gary Shteyngart, and others take us step by step through the alchemy of writing fiction, answering everything from nuts-and-bolts queries—“Do you outline?”—to perennial questions posed by writers and readers alike: “What makes a character compelling?”

From Stephen King’s deadpan distinction between novels and short stories (“Novels are longer and have more s**t in them”) to Colm Toibin’s anti-romanticized take on his characters (“They are just words”) to José Manuel Prieto’s mature perspective on the anxieties of influence (“Influences are felt or weigh you down more when young”), every page contains insights found nowhere else.

With honesty, humor, and elegance, The Secret Miracle gives both aspiring writers and lovers of literature a master class in the art of writing.


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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Daniel Alarcón is the author most recently of Lost City Radio, which was named a 2007 Best Book by the Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post, the San Francisco Chronicle, and others.

826 National is a network of youth tutoring, writing, and publishing centers located in San Francisco, New York, Los Angeles, Ann Arbor, Chicago, Seattle, and Boston.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

The Secret Miracle
CHAPTER 1
READING AND INFLUENCES
WHAT DO YOU LOOK FOR IN A NOVEL?
 
SUSAN MINOT: Transport. Enchantment. Guidance. Pleasure. Beauty. Novelty. Entertainment. Charm. Poetry. Truth. Solace. Wit. Wisdom.
 
MARIO VARGAS LLOSA: I look for the same thing that I try to achieve when writing a novel--a well-told story. I believe that is the most difficult thing, to tell a story in an absolutely persuasive manner. To make readers live that experience--not just as readers, but to really experience it. For me the novels that achieve that are the most moving and leave a lasting impression in my memory.
 
YIYUN LI: I look for a world--sometimes it is one as familiar as this one world we have, and sometimes it is a strange world that perhaps would only happen in a dream--but in either case when I read a novel I look to live in that world along with the characters.
 
PAUL AUSTER: Passion, power, integrity, beauty.
 
HARUKI MURAKAMI: If I want to read it again, it must surely be a good novel.
 
CHRIS ABANI: The most important thing for me is that a novelist has a philosophical engagement with the world, some deeper question about their place in all of this that emerges subtly and beautifully through the work they do, regardless of what the apparent subject is. So for instance, Toni Morrison wants to understand what love is and what it means to us and the ways in which we understand it, use it, and want to control it.
For her, trauma, violence, and hate are symptomatic of our inability to face and accept all the facets of love. Language, exquisite prose is also essential: I cannot read a book for the story anymore, no matter how compelling. I also love books that challenge our ideas of convention, novels are meant to be just that, novel.
 
RICK MOODY: A certain kind of irreducible complexity, a mixture of very good and memorable prose, originality with respect to the form, and a density of thematic material. What I don't require and don't consider relevant: "likeable" characters, naturalism, epiphanic transformations, pilotting, or a rationale for what is going on around us in the world.
 
ADANIA SHIBLI: I usually can only see the words, how they come to express what they express. I'm rarely interested in what they express; that is the being of the word rather than what it tells.
 
COLM TÓIBÍN: A novel looks for something in me. Meaning, there is no type of novel I like or look for, or no set of emotional contours or contexts I look for. But if what a novel exudes has not been felt properly or seriously or deeply enough by the writer, then it will show and I will become tremendously bored and irritated.
 
CRISTINA GARCIA: I look for poetry in a novel. And that means from the get-go it's singing to me in some particular, peculiar voice. And if that doesn't exist, it's hard for me to get interested.
 
STEPHEN KING: Entertainment and good language.
 
SANTIAGO RONCAGLIOLO: Emotions and ideas. I want a story that I can't put down, that makes me forget the real world but that, like Richard Ford said, brings me back better prepared to live it. I look for an experience that transports me to other lives, and returns me to mine after having looked at it from the outside.
 
JOSH EMMONS: I look for well-crafted language and authorial intelligence; with these in place every story can provide the aesthetic bliss Nabokov said was literature's greatest reward.
 
ALAA AL ASWANY: At this point I think of the novel as a life of the people, similar to our daily lives but more composed, more significant, more beautiful. What do I care about while reading a novel? The human experience, the human feelings, the human logic. This is the real challenge of the novelist.
 
RODDY DOYLE: Surprise and reassurance.
 
JENNIFER EGAN: The thing I most crave is to be sucked into a novel and feel that helpless sense that I can't stop reading, and that I'd do anything--give up anything, certainly a night's sleep--in order to keep reading. When I step back and look at what qualities in a novel inspire that sense of urgency (and I wish it happened more often) I'd say the top one is surprise. The surprise can arrive in many forms: a fresh, distinct voice; a story whose moves are counterintuitive or unexpected; the language stands out as being original, or innovative. What most excites me as a reader is the sense that I'm encountering material I haven't seen before.
 
JOSÉ MANUEL PRIETO: A different way of looking at the world, one that expands my way of understanding it--not through factual knowledge (data, dates, historical events) but with a new philosophy, a unique grammar of existence.
 
GLEN DAVID GOLD: Sheer entertainment.
 
ADAM MANSBACH: Truth and beauty. Soulfulness. Honesty. Emotional resonance. Insight into the human condition expressed in prose that is original and well-wrought--and funny, when possible. Beyond that, I don't know that I have specific criteria; certainly, there are topics that will make me pick up a book, because they dovetail with my own interests--the complexities of race in America, for instance--or because they offer clues about some problem I'm trying to solve in my own work. But I'm also learning not to trust my own interests too completely; to only read the books with obvious appeal is to miss out on a lot.
 
SAŠA STANIŠI: I look for a novel to entertain and enlighten me.
 
RABIH ALAMEDDINE: After reading a great novel, I am not the same person I was before I read it. Now all that stuff we take for granted--great story, great structure, great language--that all makes for a really good novel. But a great novel is not the one that transforms the character but the one that transforms the reader. In a lot of workshops they tell you there has to be a movement in the narrator. For me, that's minor.
 
ALEKSANDAR HEMON: I look for what I don't expect. Great novels make you change your mind about what you know, what you expect. They teach you how to read them, which is to say that they force you to drop your expectations and aesthetic prejudices, they force you to read in a way you are not accustomed to. I want the reading of a novel to be a transformative experience.
 
MEHMET MURAT SOMER: For some time I've been discerning in my appreciation and my liking. As a reader I look at what I like, which is joy. It's very essential for me. And wit. I love to have a smile on my face, both while reading and for some time after, as residue in my memory.As an author, I appreciate many books, even envy the way they were written, but do not like all of them. I don't feel comfortable with slaps to my face or fists in my stomach. Perhaps because I'm still in my never-ending rose-colored phase.
 
CLAIRE MESSUD: Ah--satisfaction and a challenge both. What exactly these entail it is impossible properly to elaborate; but suffice it to say that for me, no novel is satisfying without some challenge, whether narrative or structural or linguistic or intellectual or some combination of these; and yet, if a novel impresses me as all challenge--that's to say, without any tangible narrative satisfactions--then I'm unlikely to be won over.
 
TAYARI JONES: I am drawn to novels about families--I love the permanence of the relationships, the way they tend to box the characters in, forcing them to really stretch the relationship to the snapping point. I like sad and difficult stories. If something is blurbed as a feel-good story, I go running the other way. I want a story to give me hard truths. I want a novel that isn't afraid to follow a story to its true end, even if what is discovered there isn't good news.
 
T COOPER: Sometimes it's no more complicated than wanting to get out of my own head for a spell. But I suppose I also want the usual: to be surprised and moved, inspired to think about some small thing in some different way--and I guess I also secretly want a novel to inspire a little envy (I know it's the right book when I find myself ensnared in a desperate love/hate relationship with it).
 
DINAW MENGESTU: In general whenever I'm reading I'm looking for language first--for a strong, distinct, accurate, and even beautiful prose style. After that I think I tend to look for novels that feel like they have a real engagement with the world, for novels that look beyond certain conventions or settings.
 
EDWIDGE DANTICAT: A great story. Good plot. Beautiful language. Good pacing. I want a novel to grab me by the throat and not allow me to put it down.
 
GEORGE PELECANOS: An original voice.
 
NELL FREUDENBERGER: I look for characters in a novel. This is my bias, but beautiful sentences or a particularly compelling setting (and I'm a sucker for books that take place in countries, cities I've never visited) isn't enough for me. I like that shock of recognizing things about human beings that seem to be true, even if I've never been articulate enough to put them into words myself. I think of George Eliot as the master of this particular novelistic skill.
 
JONATHAN LETHEM

Product Details

  • Paperback: 368 pages
  • Publisher: St. Martin's Griffin; 1 edition (April 13, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0805087141
  • ISBN-13: 978-0805087147
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.5 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #436,762 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars A must-read for new novelists. June 10, 2010
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Well known novelists share their views and answer questions you didn't even know you had. They had the same struggles a new novelist is having. How do you make a character compelling? They'll tell how. When do you know when the novel is finished? They'll say when. When do you toss out whole pages? These and many, many more questions will be answered.

I was writing alone, of course, and wondering about these questions and knew no other novelist to talk to. Now I know many who freely shared their experiences in this well edited book. I am so grateful to Daniel Alarcon for contacting many well-known novelists and pulling this book together.

June Stephenson
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
By Lupus
Format:Paperback
I enjoyed the book because it was easy to read and I could leave it and then pick it up without feeling I missed anything. I assume most are well-known writers who are included in this collection of discussions, but I'm not familiar with the works of most of them, and some have unpronounceable names, or so it seems. Stephen King is included, but most of his contributions are one-liners. Anyway, questions are asked about writing novels and the contributors give their comments. Some of them are quite detailed.

Now, some of the questions are a little odd, but I think most were germane to the process of writing a novel. One thing becomes clear before you've finished a few pages: every writer has his/her own method and style, and the bottom line is what works for them, not what they learned from some book of rules. Some writers of "how-to" books on fiction seem to set their own preferred methods in concrete, but you can only decide that's nonsense after reading this book. It is interesting to read the wide variety of responses to the various questions, and if nothing else, it will reassure the writer-wannabe that the only thing that really matters is WHAT WORKS for him or her. But don't come to this book with the idea that you're going to learn some hard-and-fast rule for writing a novel, because you'll only be disappointed. Still, for all those interested in the writing process, it's enjoyable and informative to read a collection of writer contributions like this. Just have realistic expectations and sit back and enjoy.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Based on the 5 star reviews I read here, I sent for Daniel Alarcon's book, eager to enhance my skills/knowledge as a novelist. But what I received was the most boring, inane collection of answers to boring, inane questions the editor put to the writers included in this work. Here are some examples: "How many books do you read in a given month?" "How many books do you read at a time?" "How do you balance reading widely with reading that is immediately useful to your work?" "Are there certain authors you won't read for fear of undue influence?" "Has being a novelist changed the way you read novels?" Do you need more?

Some of the writers queried valiantly tried to give intelligent responses, but others, like Haruki Murakami, treated these questions with the kind of answer they deserve: In response to "What do you read before/during the writing of a novel," he said "I don't care much about what to read when I am writing." A dumb question deserves a vapid answer.

Even if these questions were stimulating, by the time you read a half dozen responses (there are around 40 authors queried here), you feel dazed. Most don't differ that much. It's deadening.

If you like the kinds of questions readers ask of authors at book signings, this book may be for you. If you expect more intelligent, in depth explorations of the writing process, don't buy this book!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
2.0 out of 5 stars Not what it should be
There are some interesting things in this overlong collection of writers' answers to what I'd guess was a list of emailed questions -- but there's far more that is not worth... Read more
Published 8 months ago by Henry Marchand
5.0 out of 5 stars A Veritable Feast for Aspiring Novelists
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Reviewed by C.J.Singh (Berkeley, CA)
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Long ago, W. Somerset Maugham observed:"There are three rules for writing the novel. Read more
Published 13 months ago by C. J. Singh
4.0 out of 5 stars It's fine.
I have bought quite a few books on the craft of writing, and this is a different take on that well-worn genre. Read more
Published on March 31, 2011 by Edwin Reese
3.0 out of 5 stars OK Resource
Some of the bestselling authors answer questions about writing. I found some of the comments to be worthwhile, while others were just filler. Read more
Published on March 6, 2011 by Cheryl Wedesweiler
5.0 out of 5 stars An indispenable read for all fiction writers!
The Secret Miracle has joined a select few group of books on my bedside table for reading after a hard day's writing. Read more
Published on February 2, 2011 by Nancy Christie
4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting questions to novelists.
I picked up this book while killing time at Barnes and Noble before work. I found it very interesting. Read more
Published on January 8, 2011 by Svarog The Mighty
5.0 out of 5 stars A feast of insight and experience into the novelist's craft
I was pleasantly surprised by the richness of the information and writerly wisdom contained in this book... plotting, drafting, short story vs novel, influences... Read more
Published on October 16, 2010 by Middleman
5.0 out of 5 stars Insightful and Fun Comparisons
In this "handbook for novelist," many fiction writers have submitted answers to a list of questions concerning many aspects of this profession or art. Read more
Published on October 1, 2010 by Michael Travis Jasper
5.0 out of 5 stars The Secret
The authors of The Secret Miracale left no stone unturned in this book. Questions raging from writer's block to how do you know if your book is done, are answered by a number of... Read more
Published on September 2, 2010 by Dr Adam Weiss
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