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Nicola Griffith

Nicola Griffith


Last Updated: 11/19/2009

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City: SEATTLE
Country: US

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November 6, 2009 - Friday 

In an AOL author chat many years ago, the moderator asked me, "What kind of writer are you?" I said, "A good one." No doubt he meant, What genre do you work in?, but that's a question I've never been interested in answering. I write good novels. I aim to write great novels. Sometimes the publisher calls these novels science fiction, or lesbian fiction, or crime fiction, or historical fiction. I call them good books.

As a writer, I am ambitious.  I've never been shy about that.  (See my rant on the subject, You've been warned.)  But I hadn't consciously considered my ambitions as an editor (though I have thought about why I edit), until a writer asked me the other day, "What kind of editor are you?" I said, "A good one."  But that's not the whole truth.  Here's what I would say today:

As an editor, I am extremely ambitious--for you. It is not enough for me to help you polish your sentences, punch up your plot, and hone your characters. It's not enough to strike out your adverbs and adjectives. Not enough to point out your clichés and remind you to be specific. I will do all those things, of course--it's where we must begin--but they are only stepping stones to my real goal.

I want to help you change the world.

To do that, I'll help you write the best story of your life. I will look at your draft and I will ask you questions; I'll help you find out what you really want to say. Most writers begin by stepping around their story. I will help you drive straight for its heart. I will help you find the right words, the right scenes, the right settings and characters, the right POV, the right tense, the right trouble. I will stand sternly at the entrance to the road labeled The Easy Way Out and urge you back to the true path.

I will not shrug and let you get away with less than your best. I will keep you working until the wide way to the centre of your story opens before you. You will walk that way to the very best thing you've ever written (so far). When people read it, they will be changed.

That's what great writing does. That's the point. Oh, it entertains us, yes, it delights and amuses us, but it changes us, just a little. It widens our perspective, just a degree or two, increases our understanding, sharpens our vision. If your work changes one tiny thing in one reader, you change the way that person approaches the world. That changes the world.

Hundreds of readers have told me my work has changed their lives. A handful have told me my work saved their lives. One told me my work eased someone's death. That's why I write. That's why I teach and edit: so you can change the world, too.

Do you want to change the world?  If you don't, what do you want to achieve with your writing?


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Sylvia
Sylvia Matthews

 
You make me want to be a writer because I believe what you say about changing the world. I think it works just like that, a lttle at a time here and there. But alas I am a soap box type of speaker/story teller. So I am the opposite of who you're talking to. I want to change the world but I don't want to write, not in the sense that I think you mean. I feel like I'm in distribution, when I find the right voices who have an audience I promote them as much as I possibly can. For instance right now I am promoting Rick Steves and his message Travel as a Political Act. I have the link for it so when I find it I'll come back and post it. It is on my facebook page if you don't want to wait. 

Sly 


 
Posted by Sylvia on November 6, 2009 - Friday - 19:58
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Sylvia
Sylvia Matthews

 
Look how fast I got back here with this link, wow that must be  record for speed. ;-)

Rick Steves Travel as a Political Act
 http://fora.tv/2009/10/28/Rick_Steves_Travel_As_a_Political_Act
 
Posted by Sylvia on November 6, 2009 - Friday - 20:03
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Nicola Griffith
Nicola Griffith

 
Sly, you do your share of changing the world one bit at a time.

 
Posted by Nicola Griffith on November 7, 2009 - Saturday - 20:10
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Jo
Jo B.

 
I've always been ambitious and I've always wanted to save the world. I think that's one reason all the crap I have hasn't killed me . . .  I out-ambitioned it :P.  And did you save my life?  Most probably.  And I thank you for that . . .
 
Posted by Jo on November 6, 2009 - Friday - 20:41
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Nicola Griffith
Nicola Griffith

 
I'm glad you survived, and touched that I might have been a part of that.  Thank you.

 
Posted by Nicola Griffith on November 7, 2009 - Saturday - 20:11
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Sylvia
Sylvia Matthews

 
I just have to clarify something I said, as I sit here being me with Joe Strummer's Mongo Bomgo coming through my ears I realized that I said I didn't want to be a writer. That is so not the truth, I do want to be a writer but I don't consider myself as such by definition. If I were to pick what I consider myself it would be musician but even that is in the past. What I have become is a purveyer of bits of useful information and a voice for change in how people view and treat each other. 

I have always had a hard time with the concept of borders and/or the ownership of land that was orginally grabbed/stolen from I'm not sure who by again I'm nor sure who. I can't fathom who they might have been any where in the world.  It's the whole thing of being human and trying to understand that and how to use this form of life that can make it better for everyone instead of how much of the world's resources can I corner for my own personal profit. 

I personally think this is at the heart of what makes war and it's not even that one might fear not having enough to get through life as a happy individual but rather how much can I have so I can be better than everyone else or to acquire power. It's crazy

One of my favorite phrases of all time though it doesn't really address my global concerns it is a start towards this type of thinking. "Doctors Without Boders". The idea that doctors would choose to go to places that would be hard and maybe even dangerous to live in order to bring medicine to places that don't have it like we do. My ambition is all wrapped up in that kind of thing, that kind of writing.

Sly  
 
Posted by Sylvia on November 6, 2009 - Friday - 22:17
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Rebecca
Rebecca Swartz

 
Oh. My. Nicola, that was...hugely affecting. And yes, I do want to change the world.
 
Posted by Rebecca on November 7, 2009 - Saturday - 01:11
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Nicola Griffith
Nicola Griffith

 
Thank you.  And good.

 
Posted by Nicola Griffith on November 7, 2009 - Saturday - 20:12
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