A WHOLE WAFFLE LOT OF PREMISE: ADVENTURES IN REWRITES - PART THREE
I want the waffle, the whole waffle, and nothing but the waffle, please.
If zeroing in on this big picture stuff seems a little agonizing, it is. So much of writing is pure magic — inhabiting characters, speccing out arcs, running set ups and payoffs and turning a solid phrase in dialogue… But your structure, your narrative spine, your theme? Those elements are much more essential. Without this stuff, all the fun bits and bobs just scramble around like a herd of kittens in a thicket of catnip.
Cute, but so very useless.
Cue the house with no foundation adage. I’ve harped hard enough on that now, and I imagine some of you are thinking, “If what Youngo’s saying were true, would he really have gotten stuck like he just did in the previous entry?”
That’s art, folks — sometimes, you can go down weeklong paths thinking you’re breaking ground, only to discover you’re in that weird loop prison from Thor: Ragnarok and are back where you started. If you can’t hack that, you’re probably not long for this trade. Or, you’re just a genius, in which case — why the heck are you reading my blog?
Am I grumpy? Only because the coffee isn’t doing it today.
The thing is, these false starts and dead ends are all the product of lacking a clear thematic premise. It’s basically your creative GPS. So… how to leap the hurdle?
I started zeroing in on a nearly-working theme last session, and in the time since then I’ve realized it’s probably best to alter my approach to getting this thing nailed down. Last time, I was trying to build one out of a poorly constructed protagonist. I didn’t heed my own advice… And the one key element I forgot to add as the secret sauce when devising a premise is this: As the writer, you have to believe in it, too.
This may seem obvious, but at least for me, with the instinct to get cracking at the page, I’ve got a tendency to slap on something that works well enough and try to smooth over the problems later. In case you haven’t figured it out, this impulse is probably the reason for my shoddy first draft. With this in mind… Now what?
Instead of spinning the problem solving wheels until burnout, I need to think a little more deeply. In order to control the narrative, and know what elements from Draft One I want to keep, I need to know my Big Why. That is: What purpose does this story serve?
Fame and riches is not a sufficient answer. Cows will fly before either happen.
This question is especially important when you’re writing something for kids. Sure, they’ll enjoy a good old yarn, but remember those vegetables we talked about? Well, this is how you sneak ‘em in. Writing for the general “kid” audience usually cuts people off at the legs — they’ll try to dumb things down, they’ll try to cast too wide a net, they’ll imagine what their idea of a kid would enjoy… And the sad news is, that idea of what a kid is — more often than not — is both patronizing and wrong.
Not a good foundation, huh?
I’ve been writing almost exclusively for kids for a little over three years now. The way I’ve found always works is to write something that you wish your kid self had when they were growing up. So keeping this in mind — is “books are cool, don’t sweat it” really a sufficient theme? Nope. Nope, nope, nope.
To give you an idea of how this works when it’s working, I’ll tell you a story about a little spec-script that could called Escape from Starry Night. With this, I wanted to capture how it felt growing up with my Mom — an artist who was struggling to come to grips with clinical depression while raising the creative rapscallion I described above. I wanted to give kids who might be going through something similar a place to realize that there’s hope for anybody coping with mental illness. I wanted to write something that would give struggling parents hope and give kids a crazy escapist adventure that fed them the vegetables surmised quite simply as, “Love can overcome darkness.” That lit the way for an adventure that’s been serving me very well, and I hope to find a home for on a screen someplace.
Now, I’m looking to break new ground, and to do so, I need to aim for a different set of thematic subjects. Where to begin? We begin, as always, in the past.
A BRIEF HISTORY OF CHILDHOOD YOUNGO
I was a delightfully weird kid. Anybody who knew me will tell you as much. Fiercely creative, stubborn, who spent a loads of time in worlds conjured from his imagination and seasoned with pop culture. I was the type of kid who would wear his before-cosplay-was-a-thing cosplay to school and face the (in hindsight, unavoidable) ridicule of his classmates. I was an outsider, a “loser”, and if I’m telling the truth, the funny part about it was I somehow believed that if people could see the world as I imagined it, I would gain acceptance. I longed to be seen, but wasn’t ready for the consequences that came with it. It made me feel like there was something wrong with me. Looking back, I’ve come to know that my weirdness was my superpower — and it’s set me on a path that’s been more rewarding than popularity ever could’ve been. That kid still lives within me, and now that I’m blessed with getting to imagine worlds and stories for a living, it’s the driving force in much of my day-to-day life.
If I could time travel, I’d show tell him two things:
1) Invest in medical stocks.
2) That the motley crew of misfits I surrounded myself with were so much better for me than life on the bleachers with the cool kids would’ve been.
No hate to you bleacher-sitters. There’s great value in being accepted and finding your rung on the social ladder, too. But I don’t know what your world was. I know what it was to feel alienated, to fear rejection, to go through the halls of G.L. Comba Public School waiting for a bully to punch me in the gut or make fun of my Dragon Ball Z predilection. Both sides of the fence had their ups and downs.
So I’m going to write something for the kids who felt like I did… And let’s be grown-ups for a moment: Don’t we all feel that anxiety of being left out? F.O.M.O., as they say? I still think there’s a stake at play in there that not only speaks to my inner kid, but to a universal audience. This is the thing I’m after. I want the young weirdos of today to realize that who they are is their greatest asset, and that trying to hide who you are will result in more pain than the price of acceptance is worth.
Hey, did you see that theme emerge right at the end there?
So here’s the thing: because my protagonist Rory is the weak link, beefing up the premise might require a change in perspective. Sometimes the easiest way to define our hero is to look at their antithesis — their force of opposition: the antagonist, the big bad, the villain.
For the Librarian, this arena is a lot more fully formed. I’ve mention that the general hook is that antagonists from classic literature are all trying to escape their covers, but that’s nebulous. Who specifically? Why?
Rejoice, for this element already exists in my first draft. Her name is Hazel West, A.K.A. the Wicked Witch of Oz’s Western hemisphere. Early on, she discovers that water in the land of reality doesn’t melt her the way it does in her pages, so she’s dead-set on escape the pages of L. Frank Baum and enjoy the simple pleasure of a bath. Hazel is much more clearly defined — not just by her absurd goal, but by a thematic element: She doesn’t want to be who she is.
Not so much that she doesn’t want to be evil — although, toying with this may very well make from some interesting character work — but that she doesn’t want to be fictional. She doesn’t want to be defined by her existence in a book, and because in the modern world, we’re reading less and less, she also feels ignored. In short, she is doing everything in her power to become real, to be seen, to be something contrary to her essence.
One of my great mentors in film school liked to say, “the antagonist is the measure of the protagonist.” I know what you’re thinking… Was Daniel schooled by a narrative fortune cookie? Jury’s out on that. But this is just simple math: your antagonist is the force of opposition. In narrative, characters are revealed by how they handle obstacles, and therefore in order for your hero to have a truly worth challenge, they have to meet a force of opposition with its thumb on their Achilles’ tendon. If they’re too easy to overcome, you’ve got no conflict, and then you’ve got no story… New day, same old saw. But it’s a simple and elegant truth.
For my personal brand of story, I like to have an antagonist who is essentially my hero’s inner problem gone totally wrong. By doing this, I set myself up for the villain not just to be overcome, but also be the force that teaches my protagonist to look within and address their own flaw — and by overcoming not just save the day, but grow as a character. It’s pretty classical, but the classics stay with us because they work so well.
And now I’m starting to see a thematic premise that does more than just force-feed the vegetables, and encapsulates more than just the hero’s inner problem. There’s a unit of opposites forming here (more on that down the line). This allows me to get more specific. So what am I trying to say? What will guide all my choices as I reshape this narrative? What is the lesson that will be undeniable by the end of the story that I’ll never say out loud and let the audience gather for themselves?
If you worry too much about the world rejecting you, you’ll wind up rejecting yourself.
Now we’re cooking with gas, right? Well, almost.
Because this sentiment, while being very sweet for outsiders, is still just a little too inert. It suggests consequence, but not necessarily conclusion. That means it gets you to the All is Lost/Dark Night of the Soul beat where your hero sees the error of their ways, but it leaves Act Three too open. How does this conclude? What’s the inevitable destination of this idea?
LET’S TRY ON A FEW OUTFITS, SHALL WE?
If you reject yourself to avoid rejection by the world, you’ll have nothing to stand on when the world turns on you.
If you worry too much about the world rejecting you, you’ll wind up rejecting yourself — and that will lead you to ruin.
If you allow the fear of rejection to cause self-rejection, you wind up surrendering control of your narrative.
Just given the subject matter of literary characters, that last one feels like it’s getting close. I need to dig into this just a little more. So what will help get this focused is weaving my protagonist, antagonist, concept, and genre together. So what do I know that can help inform this and get it just right?
I know that the literary characters are breaching the real world because they feel trapped inside their narratives — with the world around them threatening to leave them behind, they’re losing sight of their value. Not just the Wicked Witch, either. Every character in the Land of Fiction will feel this to some extent. This nicely mirrors a typical, “high school outsider feels like they’re being erased by the social conditions of school” narrative. If Rory is trying to fit in so as not to be erased, then she’s effectively going through the same situation as the fictional characters. Ultimately, the thing that seems to be in question here is how what makes you unique determines the value of who you are.
So I think the bin that catches everything is this:
If you reject who you are to avoid rejection by the world at large, you’ll wind up forgetting the value of who you are.
After all, while we love to hate a villain, don’t they have value? Do they not teach us all the things we shouldn’t do? Don’t they give us a place to examine how good ends don’t justify bad means? Sure, a paper-thin villain may only show us that “bad is bad” but even this can’t be dismissed as totally worthless. What is losing sight of your own worth if not total destruction? Isn’t the fate of being stuck hating who you are and rejected for it even worse than being rejected? And what are the stakes with this? To have nobody — not even your own self — appreciate your value is a state worse than death, right?
So I think we’ve got a take now. This principle suggests a conclusion, packs a healthy serving of vegetables, and life-or-death stakes all at once. It has the potential to guide every decision to follow in shaping the narrative.
Now, it might seem like tremendous overkill to have devoted days of noodling and some five-thousand words just to render a single sentence. But the value of this premise will become clear in every section that follows. So now I’ll write this premise on a cue card and tape it on my bedpost. I’ll keep it in a place I can always see it, so that from here on, I know what this story is really about.
“Great!” you’re thinking. “Now we can get cracking at scenes and payoffs and all the fun jazz, right?”
Sorry, pal. There’s so much more we need to get into focus before that delectable FADE IN can be re-typed.