It was hence with some surprise that I found myself a little piqued at a friend's comment that my dream was therefore an "angan-angan". A mere whimsy with no great purpose or likelihood of achievement, unlike, say, realising a dream of visiting Spain.
That's a good sign, being miffed. What better catalyst than a bruise to the ego. Heh.
I think I'm marginally more serious this time round though. Since posting Notes From the Beginnning, I've made enquiries and found the right resources. Invaluably, little embers have been coming through the email from a guide better than any I could ever hope for. Brush was a very lucky cat.
I am orienteered. I am stoked. Go me!
So here's a couple more seeds for the project. Came across this piece by the writer, Jackie Kay, at Bibliobibuli (link on sidebar). Sharon got it from Leon(loved his post titled "Haiku variations: Kiss"), who's kindly highlighted the good bits for those of us with attention deficits.
It shares something with the novel in its use of the camera lens and use of narrative voice. It shares something with poetry in its love of language, its economy, its use of metaphor and voice. It is a lovely hybrid form, a cross between a poem and a novel. It catches people at crucial moments of their lives and snaps them. The short story allows us in a short space of time to understand huge things, huge dilemmas. . . .
A short story is a small moment of belief. . . If the novel sometimes spoon feeds the reader, the short story asks her to feed herself. A story asks the reader to continue it after it has finished or to begin it before it began. There is space for the reader to come in and imagine and create. There is space for the reader to think for ages, to mull the impact of a story over, to try and recover from it! ...
. . .The story often makes a reader aware of what she is not being told. What doesn’t happen in a short story is as important as what does. Like pauses in music; it is impossible to think about the short story without also thinking of its mysterious silences.
Perhaps the thing I love about stories most is that they give the appearance of space of length, so that when you return to them you are amazed at how the writer has created that effect. A whole life in a few pages. . . .
The short story is brilliant at taking the single emblematic moment that captures the whole, … The voice of the story catches the reader and claims her. A story should stay with you long after you have put it down. A good story should change the way you see things, the way you think. It should help you know yourself better.
5 comments:
oh dear... i feel like such a pleb now. last time i read short stories was a good 15 yrs ago (jeffrey archer. didn't like it at all - and i liked all his novels). forswore them ever since. don't like how there's no plot or character development, how "(t)he story often makes a reader aware of what she is not being told". this is a GOOD thing? oh dear... :(
maybe i should give it another chance... i'm sure we're not talking "readers' digest" type short stories here.. surely the subject matter matters and would make all the difference... *hope so hope so hope so*
snowie.. exactly how i felt!! hated short stories since that jeffrey archer book.. and i so love his other books!! i swore i wun read short stories again too!!
but i think spot mentioned "interconnected series of short stories".. so i was hopeful.. :D
and pls dun write cryptic-ly!! :D
so, now we know how to make u less lazy.. ke ke..
Ha ha.. I see that my angan angan thing got to you. Really, the end justifies the means. I tell myself the same thing about my own dreams or angan-angan!
You still upset wif me?
snowie & biow - you'll finish another book of shortstories before I even get through writing half of mine. yeah, will be interconnected, full of sadness and misery!
ame - of course not still upset lah...i'm very forgiving! But if you're feeling some tummy rumblings from last night's offerings, don't look my way ;)
sadness and misery! i like!!
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