Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Book Review: Midnight's Children by Salman Rushdie

Midnight's Children is a rich and fascinating book. Rushdie channels dreamy visions of Kashmir and Mumbai, but his real masterpiece is the cast of characters -- mostly the narrator's family. In a variety of magical realist encounters, Rushdie manages not to let that fantasy unravel the dysfunctional, tragic and sometimes touching human dramas surrounding his narrator.

The narrator is one of the Midnight's Children, a child born at the stroke of midnight on August 15, 1947, the day of India's independence. These thousand babes grow to earn supernatural powers. The narrator can read thoughts, which accounts for much of his storytelling, and he assembles the thousand children into a kind of telepathic congress. He's not alone -- his "twin" has supernatural knees. Yes, knees, between which he can crush and kill.

The twin is actually a family friend, but there's a critical twist. An English nursemaid switches the two boys at birth, and the narrator himself is born a bastard of a renegade Englishman and his servant Indian mother. But, because of the switch, he's raised instead in a wealthy family of unusual characters. Meanwhile, the other boy grows in the poor family and becomes a violent killer then war hero, all hinted at a distance through the narrator's tales.

That narrator is an untrustworthy fellow. He is -- or claims to be -- the catalyst of so many of the affairs and deaths and dramas surrounding him. The narrator often refuses to admit his responsibility, or to downplay his involvement. The effects are often tragic.

What his story crafts amid the web of magical realism and shady retelling is a strange and sometimes beautiful menagerie of tales that stab at the heart of India in the modern world. It's not a subject I know much about, but Rushdie brings alive India of the 1950s and 1960s in personal detail, from the toothpaste brands to the wars in Kashmir. Mumbai in particular percolates with color and colorful characters.

It's a challenging book, dense in its sometimes feverish prose and thick with layers of filtered tales. The book trails off into oblivion as modern India -- and it's pickled curries -- grow beyond the reach of the narrator's arms. He falls apart, literally, and the reader realizes there's one thing he didn't lie about: "To understand just one life, you have to swallow the world."

Midnight's Children: A-

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Dealing with Writer's Block

In my experience there are two kinds of writer's block.

The first kind of writer's block is the dreaded blank slate. It's that intimidating phase of creation where the entire universe of possibility is open before you, and you can't write one shred of it because you don't know where to even begin, perhaps even what to write at all.

I don't often lack for ideas. But, even with some broad-storke notions of what to write, I still have to zero in on something concrete, something compelling.

The second kind of writer's block is getting stuck in the middle of a story. You've got characters in some situation, and you may even have a general idea where you want them to be later in the story. But, as a writer you hit that wall and you're not sure how to move them into the next step in the story. This kind of block has its own challenges and frustrations as a writer. But, at least  you know you've gotten somewhere.

Right now, I'm working on a short story and I've hit that second writer's block. It's a turning point in the story. I even know where I want the characters to be. But, I can't yet get them there.

Some writers have great advice about overcoming these problems. Some even publish about the topic. My advice is recognize a couple important things as a writer.

First, it doesn't much matter if you're a literary genius or a best seller. Even if you are, you aren't going to write or sell nothing. Accept living in your own skin. Accept your own ideas as intrinsically worthy to the most important person in your life -- you.

Second, don't try too hard to look outside yourself for solutions. Take a break. Go live. Read and watch other media. Read. Do what you do to rejuvenate. Those things will get your brain working again. Don't worry if you feel like you're "stealing ideas" by reading other material. If you're really into writing, your brain can't help itself. It will think up ideas in your own way. That is creation.

Third, if you have the option, let someone read what you've written so far. Some people don't like to do this. I'm mixed on it myself. But often, another reader will see exactly the corner you've painted yourself into. And, often, they'll say something obvious that you can't see, like "Why in the world would this guy say that?" Answer that question, and the dam's likely to break. You may have to ask questions, and that's ok. The notion that we are alone in writing our work, and that others don't contribute to the creation is pretty foolish.

Now, if I can just get myself out of that corner I've painted myself into...