J
JAMESBJOHNSON
Guest
I read a collection of Raymond Carver short stories this weekend. The book arrived in the mail yesterday and I finished it today.
Carver captured all the mundane, inane, nutty interactions people have. He wrote about yard sales, bingo games, ordering birthday cakes, monkey business with the Avon lady, holidays with the ex, tossing the bum out of your house, asshole kids, nosy people. The stories are enchanting, but not obviously so. It sneaks up on you.
He actually wrote dialogue like real people speak. His characters are damaged and petty and noble. They are their own worst enemies.
Critics say he was a minimalist but I dont find his prose Spartan (laconic) at all. He was a poet, and poets make every word toil and mean something.
SO WHAT CAN YOU LEARN FROM CARVER?
How to use common actions to reveal personality and motives. How to create a story world.
Carver captured all the mundane, inane, nutty interactions people have. He wrote about yard sales, bingo games, ordering birthday cakes, monkey business with the Avon lady, holidays with the ex, tossing the bum out of your house, asshole kids, nosy people. The stories are enchanting, but not obviously so. It sneaks up on you.
He actually wrote dialogue like real people speak. His characters are damaged and petty and noble. They are their own worst enemies.
Critics say he was a minimalist but I dont find his prose Spartan (laconic) at all. He was a poet, and poets make every word toil and mean something.
SO WHAT CAN YOU LEARN FROM CARVER?
How to use common actions to reveal personality and motives. How to create a story world.