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Thursday, October 29, 2020

Writing - part xx392 Writing a Novel, the Plot of The Canterbury Tales

29 October 2020, Writing - part xx392 Writing a Novel, the Plot of The Canterbury Tales

Announcement: Delay, my new novels can be seen on the internet, but my primary publisher has gone out of business—they couldn’t succeed in the past business and publishing environment.  I’ll keep you informed, but I need a new publisher.  More information can be found at www.ancientlight.com.  Check out my novels—I think you’ll really enjoy them.
Introduction: I wrote the novel Aksinya: Enchantment and the Daemon. This was my 21st novel and through this blog, I gave you the entire novel in installments that included commentary on the writing. In the commentary, in addition to other general information on writing, I explained, how the novel was constructed, the metaphors and symbols in it, the writing techniques and tricks I used, and the way I built the scenes. You can look back through this blog and read the entire novel beginning with http://www.pilotlion.blogspot.com/2010/10/new-novel-part-3-girl-and-demon.html.
I’m using this novel as an example of how I produce, market, and eventually (we hope) get a novel published. I’ll keep you informed along the way.
Today’s Blog: To see the steps in the publication process, visit my writing websites http://www.sisteroflight.com/.
The four plus one basic rules I employ when writing:
1. Don’t confuse your readers.
2. Entertain your readers.
3. Ground your readers in the writing.
4. Don’t show (or tell) everything.
     4a. Show what can be seen, heard, felt, smelled, and tasted on the stage of the novel.
5. Immerse yourself in the world of your writing.
These are the steps I use to write a novel including the five discrete parts of a novel:

1.      Design the initial scene
2.      Develop a theme statement (initial setting, protagonist, protagonist’s helper or antagonist, action statement)
a.       Research as required
b.      Develop the initial setting
c.       Develop the characters
d.      Identify the telic flaw (internal and external)
3.      Write the initial scene (identify the output: implied setting, implied characters, implied action movement)
4.      Write the next scene(s) to the climax (rising action)
5.      Write the climax scene
6.      Write the falling action scene(s)
7.      Write the dénouement scene
I finished writing my 29th novel, working title, Detective, potential title Blue Rose: Enchantment and the Detective.  The theme statement is: Lady Azure Rose Wishart, the Chancellor of the Fae, supernatural detective, and all around dangerous girl, finds love, solves cases, breaks heads, and plays golf.  
Here is the cover proposal for Blue Rose: Enchantment and the Detective
Cover Proposal
The most important scene in any novel is the initial scene, but eventually, you have to move to the rising action. I am continuing to write on my 30th novel, working title Red Sonja.  I finished my 29th novel, working title Detective.  I’m planning to start on number 31, working title Shifter
How to begin a novel.  Number one thought, we need an entertaining idea.  I usually encapsulate such an idea with a theme statement.  Since I’m writing a new novel, we need a new theme statement.  Here is an initial cut.

For novel 30:  Red Sonja, a Soviet spy, infiltrates the X-plane programs at Edwards AFB as a test pilot’s administrative clerk, learns about freedom, and is redeemed.

For novel 31:  Deirdre and Sorcha are redirected to French finishing school where they discover difficult mysteries, people, and events. 

Here is the scene development outline:

1. Scene input (comes from the previous scene output or is an initial scene)
2. Write the scene setting (place, time, stuff, and characters)
3. Imagine the output, creative elements, plot, telic flaw resolution (climax) and develop the tension and release.
4. Write the scene using the output and creative elements to build the tension.
5. Write the release
6. Write the kicker
          
Today:  Why don’t we go back to the basics and just writing a novel?  I can tell you what I do, and show you how I go about putting a novel together.  We can start with developing an idea then move into the details of the writing. 

To start a novel, I picture an initial scene.  I may start from a protagonist or just launch into mental development of an initial scene.  I get the idea for an initial scene from all kinds of sources.  To help get the creative juices flowing, let’s look at the initial scene. 

1.      Meeting between the protagonist and the antagonist or the protagonist’s helper
2.      Action point in the plot
3.      Buildup to an exciting scene
4.      Indirect introduction of the protagonist

Ideas.  We need ideas.  Ideas allow us to figure out the protagonist and the telic flaw.  Ideas don’t come fully armed from the mind of Zeus.  We need to cultivate ideas. 

1.      Read novels. 
2.      Fill your mind with good stuff—basically the stuff you want to write about. 
3.      Figure out what will build ideas in your mind and what will kill ideas in your mind.
4.      Study.
5.      Teach. 
6.      Make the catharsis. 
7.      Write.

The development of ideas is based on study and research, but it is also based on creativity.  Creativity is the extrapolation of older ideas to form new ones or to present old ideas in a new form.  It is a reflection of something new created with ties to the history, science, and logic (the intellect).  Creativity requires consuming, thinking, and producing.

If we have filled our mind with all kinds of information and ideas, we are ready to become creative.  Creativity means the extrapolation of older ideas to form new ones or to present old ideas in a new form.  Literally, we are seeing the world in a new way, or actually, we are seeing some part of the world in a new way. 

I’ve worked through creativity and the protagonist.  The ultimate point is that if you properly develop your protagonist, you have created your novel.  This moves us on to plots and initial scenes.  As I noted, if you have a protagonist, you have a novel.  The reason is that a protagonist comes with a telic flaw, and a telic flaw provides a plot and theme.  If you have a protagonist, that gives you a telic flaw, a plot, and a theme.  I will also argue this gives you an initial scene as well. 

So, we worked extensively on the protagonist.  I gave you many examples great, bad, and average.  Most of these were from classics, but I also used my own novels and protagonists as examples.  Here’s my plan.

1.      The protagonist comes with a telic flaw – the telic flaw isn’t necessarily a flaw in the protagonist, but rather a flaw in the world of the protagonist that only the Romantic protagonist can resolve.
2.      The telic flaw determines the plot.
3.      The telic flaw determines the theme.
4.      The telic flaw and the protagonist determines the initial scene.
5.      The protagonist and the telic flaw determines the initial setting.
6.      Plot examples from great classic plots.
7.      Plot examples from mediocre classic plots.
8.      Plot examples from my novels.
9.      Creativity and the telic flaw and plots.
10.  Writer’s block as a problem of continuing the plot.

Every great or good protagonist comes with their own telic flaw.  I showed how this worked with my own writing and novels.  Let’s go over it in terms of the plot.

This is all about the telic flaw.  Every protagonist and every novel must come with a telic flaw.  They are the same telic flaw.  That telic flaw can be external, internal or both.

We found that a self-discovery telic flaw or a personal success telic flaw can potentially take a generic plot.  We should be able to get an idea for the plot purely from the protagonist, telic flaw and setting.  All of these are interlaced and bring us our plot.

For a great plot, the resolution of the telic flaw has to be a surprise to the protagonist and to the reader.  This is both the measure and the goal.  As I noted before, for a great plot, the author needs to make the telic flaw resolution appear to be impossible, but then it happens.  There is much more to this.  Here’s the list of plots I’ve looked at already:

1.      Redemption
2.      Detective or mystery
3.      Messiah
4.      End of the World
5.      War
6.      Anti-war
7.      Revenge or vengeance
8.      Revelation
9.      Zero to hero

Here is the list of classics that everyone should read.  What I want to do is evaluate this list for the plots. 

This is the plan.  Let’s look at each novel and try to pull out the plot types, the telic flaw, and the theme of the novel. The ultimate point is we can glean plot ideas and types to add to our list.  Part of this evaluation, we can try to identify the zero and the hero of the protagonist.  All this might help us define plots and perhaps help us to develop plots for our own novels.  This is kind of like looking at art as an artist and figuring out what makes a picture successful.

1 Pride and Prejudice - Jane Austen
2 The Lord of the Rings - JRR Tolkien
3 Jane Eyre - Charlotte Bronte
4 Dandelion Wine – Ray Bradbury – Best modern novel in English.  
5 To Kill a Mockingbird - Harper Lee
6 The Bible – Most important book to understand Western culture.
7 Wuthering Heights - Emily Bronte
8 Nineteen Eighty Four - George Orwell
9 We The Living – Ayn Rand
10 Great Expectations - Charles Dickens

11 Little Women - Louisa M Alcott
12 Tess of the D’Urbervilles - Thomas Hardy
13 Dune – Frank Herbert
14 Complete Works of Shakespeare – better to see as plays
15 Rebecca - Daphne Du Maurier
16 The Hobbit - JRR Tolkien
17 The Cadwal Chronicles – Jack Vance
18 Catcher in the Rye - JD Salinger
19 The Green Pearl Novels – Jack Vance
20 Middlemarch - George Eliot

21 Gone With the Wind - Margaret Mitchel
22 The Great Gatsby - F Scott Fitzgerald
23 Bleak House - Charles Dickens
24 War and Peace - Leo Tolstoy
25 Starship Troopers – Robert Heinlein
27 Crime and Punishment - Fyodor Dostoyevsky
28 Grapes of Wrath - John Steinbeck
29 Alice in Wonderland - Lewis Carroll
30 The Wind in the Willows - Kenneth Grahame

31 Anna Karenina - Leo Tolstoy
32 David Copperfield - Charles Dickens 
33 Chronicles of Narnia - CS Lewis
34 Emma -Jane Austen
35 Persuasion - Jane Austen
36 Atlas Shrugged – Ayn Rand
37 The Tale of Genji - Murasaki Shikibu
38 The House of Seven Gables - Nathaniel Hawthorne
39 The Scarlet Letter - Nathaniel Hawthorne
40 Winnie the Pooh - AA Milne

41 Animal Farm - George Orwell
42 Dracula – Bram Stoker
43 Till We Have Faces – C.S. Lewis
44 Le Morte D'Arthur - Thomas Malory
45 The Woman in White - Wilkie Collins
46 Anne of Green Gables - LM Montgomery
47 Far From The Madding Crowd - Thomas Hardy
48 Ivanhoe – Sir Walter Scott
49 Lord of the Flies - William Golding
50 The Fountainhead – Ayn Rand

51 What Katy Did - Sarah Chauncey Woolsey under her pen name Susan Coolidge
52 A Little Princess - Frances Hodgson Burnett
53 The Secret Garden - Frances Hodgson Burnett
54 Sense and Sensibility - Jane Austen
55 The Jungle Book - Rudyard Kipling
56 Kim - Rudyard Kipling
57 A Tale Of Two Cities - Charles Dickens
58 Brave New World - Aldous Huxley
59 Beowulf – Unknown
60 The Odyssey – Homer

61 Of Mice and Men - John Steinbeck
62 Lolita - Vladimir Nabokov
63 The Moonstone - Wilkie Collins
64 The Maltese Falcon - Dashiell Hammett
65 The Count of Monte Cristo - Alexandre Dumas
66 As I Lay Dying - William Faulkner
67 Jude the Obscure - Thomas Hardy
68 Robinson Caruso – Daniel Defoe
69 The Red Badge of Courage - Stephen Crane
70 Moby Dick - Herman Melville

71 Oliver Twist - Charles Dickens
72 Don Quixote - Miguel De Cervantes
73 Heidi – Johanna Spyri
74 Hans Brinker - Mary Mapes Dodge
75 Ulysses - James Joyce
76 The Inferno – Dante
77 The Big Sky – Arlo Guthrie
78 Germinal - Emile Zola
79 Vanity Fair - William Makepeace Thackeray

80 The Black Arrow - Robert Louis Stevenson
81 A Christmas Carol - Charles Dickens
82 Treasure Island - Robert Louis Stevenson
83 The Gulag Archipelago - Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
84 The Miser – George Eliot
85 Madame Bovary - Gustave Flaubert
86 For Whom the Bell Tolls – Ernest Hemmingway
87 Tarzan – Edger Rice Burroughs
88 The Death of Socrates – Plato
89 Adventures of Sherlock Holmes - Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
90 I, Robot - Isaac Asimov

91 Heart of Darkness - Joseph Conrad
92 The Little Prince - Antoine De Saint-Exupery
93 Huckleberry Fin – Mark Twain
94 Watership Down - Richard Adams
95 Gulliver’s Travels - Jonathan Swift
96 Matilda – Roald Dahl
97 The Three Musketeers - Alexandre Dumas
98 The Canterbury Tales - Geoffrey Chaucer
99 Charlie and the Chocolate Factory - Roald Dahl
100 Les Miserables - Victor Hugo

101 The Once and Future King – T.H. White
102 The Deerslayer – James Fenimore Cooper
103 The Black Book of Communism – Various
104 Ben Hur – Lew Wallace
105 The Robe – Lloyd C. Douglas
106 The Pilgrim’s Progress – John Bunyan
107 The Histories – Herodotus
108 Lives – Plutarch
109 The Call of the Wild – Jack London
110 Stand on Zanzibar – John Brunner

111 The Shockwave Rider – John Brunner
112 The Aeneid – Virgil

The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer is not a novel but rather a set of short stories.  The plots and plotlines are varied, but we can look generally at them.  If you haven’t read The Canterbury Tales, I suggest you do for historical purposes.  I’m not certain you will be able to glean much from them that will help your writing.  In fact, focusing too much on The Canterbury Tales, might harm your writing.  What is worthwhile is to understand the culture and society of Chaucer. 

Perhaps the biggest problem with Chaucer and his society is that he represents perhaps the worst and the least in a culture that we know eventually achieved some level of greatness, especially in literature.  The Canterbury Tales is not one of these points of greatness, and if Chaucer and his work are to be judged by his writing, we should wonder how he or his society ever achieved anything.  You see, The Canterbury Tales are unfinished.  Many of the tales are unfinished.  They are all somewhat borrowed from other writing, and the tales Chaucer chose are mostly sexual in nature or perverse in application. 

Many historians and experts in literature wonder if Chaucer was copying the ideas of Boccaccio, who wrote The Decameron.  Chaucer certainly gives the impression with his twenty-four tales that he intended to write 120 tales: 30 pilgrims times 2 tales going to Canterbury and 2 tales coming from Canterbury, gives 120 tales.  The point being to exceed the 100 tales of Boccaccio by 20 tales.  Unfortunately, or fortunately however you look at it, Chaucer never wrote more than 24 tales, that we know of, and as I mentioned, many are unfinished.

Chaucer was a lazy piker as an author.  This is the first lesson from Chaucer.  It is alright to move to another work if you can’t complete the one you are working on, but the author keeps writing and working on his or her writing until he or she completes a work.  Chaucer just gave up and never gave us really anything else. 

Another problem with Chaucer is his tales are almost entirely bawdy sexual exploits of fantasy.  One might ask, did Chaucer simply write these tales as self-created titillations of the perverse type?  Since they are not finished and because most are of a putrid character, one might wonder if all of Chaucer’s society were caught up in rape, incest, sex, and cheating.  Perhaps, but since we know this is likely not true, the fantasy nature of Chaucer’s tales become more one of his own sexual fantasies worked on expensive paper.  Perhaps all we have are the artistic ramblings of a creative pervert.       

I’ll not mark any plots for Chaucer.  His work is too varied and too flippant to really accept as serious.  If he had finished or if he had really provided us creative and endearing works of fiction, we might evaluate them, but he didn’t.  In fact, almost all of his tales are forgotten and forgettable.  There is no novel that follows any of his tales, and really no modern short stories that encapsulate any of his plots or story ideas.  You might find one if you look hard, but I doubt it.  The Canterbury Tales, as stories and plots, are just forgettable and unusable from a writing standpoint—unless you are into writing pornography.  That might get some traction.           

Here’s the list of plots.  I’m going to amend the list as we noted. 
1.      Redemption – 13i, 7e, 17ei, 8, 1ei  
2.      Detective or mystery – 48, 1e
3.      Messiah – 8
4.      End of the World – 3
5.      War – 16
6.      Anti-war –2
7.      Revenge or vengeance –3ie, 2e, 36, 1
8.      Revelation –1e, 56, 1
9.      Zero to hero – 21, 1
10.  Romance –1ie, 34, 1
11.  Achievement – 13e, 19ei, 3i, 36, 1
12.  Article – 1e, 38, 1
13.  Travel –1e, 50, 1
14.  Coming of age –1ei, 24
15.  Progress of technology – 4
16.  Discovery – 3ie, 47, 1
17.  Rejected love (rejection) – 1ei, 20
18.  Miscommunication – 7
19.  Love triangle – 12
20.  Betrayal – 1i, 1ie, 37, 1
21.  Totalitarian – 1e, 6
22.  Blood will out or fate –1i, 1e, 24
23.  Psychological –1i, 39, 1
24.  Horror – 13
25.  Magic – 6
26.  Mistaken identity – 13
27.  Money – 2e, 24
28.  Spoiled child – 5
29.  Children – 21
30.  Historical – 14
31.  Legal – 5
32.  Adultery – 15, 1
33.  Illness – 1e, 14
34.  School – 11
35.  Self-discovery – 2i, 9
36.  Guilt or Crime – 25, 1
37.  Anti-hero – 5
38.  Immorality – 3i, 6
39.  Proselytizing – 4
40.  Satire – 8
41.  Reason – 10, 1ie
42.  Escape – 1ie, 18
43.  Knowledge or Skill – 21
44.  Camaraderie – 15, 1
45.  Parallel – 4
46.  Allegory – 9
47.  Curse – 3
48.  Insanity – 7
49.  Fantasy world – 5
50.  Mentor – 9, 1
51.  Prison – 1
52.  Secrets – 16, 1

The protagonists of The Canterbury Tales are as varied as the 24 tales.  The overall protagonist is Chaucer himself as one of the pilgrims, but there is no telic flaw beyond the telling of tales, and he didn’t succeed with that.  The tales are incomplete and the tales aren’t that usable or memorable.  Even the characters and ideas behind the characters are not that great.

All of them are worldly self-contented and conceited beyond any modern measure.  If you thought our celebrities had issues with self-control and self-awareness, the pilgrims from The Canterbury Tales are well beyond that.  This is also where Chaucer reflects what he knows but not his own society.  All the characters in The Canterbury Tales are well to do.  They are the peak of their society, not necessarily aristocrats, but from an upper stratus who are able to participate in long pilgrimage vacations.  Few in any era of starvation cultures were able to do this.  The Canterbury Tales doesn’t even represent the common or commoner in the time of Chaucer—it is completely about the very tiny merchant and ruling class: knights, clergy, and merchants.  There are no commoners in sight. 

As a historical source, The Canterbury Tales provides some degree of artistic detail, historically and as literature, it doesn’t help us much as we strive to write better.  You should read it, in your spare time.    

In the end, we can figure out what makes a work have a great plot, and apply this to our writing.     
  
Let’s start with the idea of an internal and external telic flaw.  Then let’s provide it a wrapper.  The wrapper is the plot.       
      
The beginning of creativity is study and effort.  We can use this to extrapolate to creativity.  In addition, we need to look at recording ideas and working with ideas.    
    
More tomorrow.

For more information, you can visit my author site http://www.ldalford.com/, and my individual novel websites:

fiction, theme, plot, story, storyline, character development, scene, setting, conversation, novel, book, writing, information, study, marketing, tension, release, creative, idea, logic

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