While for the most
part I welcome nearly every review to come down the pike, one side effect I’m
noticing after publishing half-a-dozen supernatural YA novels over the past
year or so is that lately I tend to write under what I call “the review cloud.”
The review cloud is a
kind of spooky place where you tend to second guess all your writing decisions
based on past, present or future reviews. You’re almost, but not quite, hoping
the “cool kids” will like it. Or trying to impress those reviewers who dinged
you the first time around, trying to prove you “get it” and can “do better”
this time.
Every negative
response you’ve gotten about a previous book, every ding or sling or arrow,
gets cycled through your inner dialogue until you begin making conscious, or
even unconscious, decisions based on that most dangerous of all creative
variables: the opinions of others.
The review cloud works
in reverse as well; it can become a kind of “silver lining” where you start to
believe all those four- and five-star reviews and start to think you can do no
wrong! (And that’s really dangerous!)
Of course, the real
danger of writing under the review cloud is that you’re listening to so many
different voices – most of them strangers, some of them random – that you start
to ignore, or even discount, the most important voice of all: your own.
If you find yourself
in this sticky situation, here are some simple tips for dealing with the review
cloud:
·
Get back to squares: Know who you are.
Know what you write, why you write it and what you love about it. Know that
nobody’s perfect, that bad reviews happen to all of us, all the time, and just.
Start. Writing. If you get preoccupied about bad reviews, or good reviews, or
constructive criticism or unsolicited advice or the rabid opinions of a
political cabal of particular “popular” reviewers, you will lose your most
valuable writerly tool: your own, unique, creative voice.
·
Write your way through
it: It can be pretty hard
to ignore the review cloud, but I find that if I just keep writing I stop
thinking about it soon enough and lose myself in the words, the story and the
characters of my work in progress. The more you think about the review cloud,
the easier it is to succumb to it. The more you just flat out write your new or
next or current book, the easier it becomes to forget.
·
Embrace it: I can remember a
recent review where I was really, brutally and scientifically taken to task for
my zombie mythology. I’m talking, I’m convinced this reviewer was actively
rabid – medically speaking – when he wrote his review. It still stings, and I
can remember my first reaction was: “Holy crap, I should never write another
zombie story again!” I mean, I was seriously considering dismantling my blog(s)
and sending a certified letter to the publisher, demanding they destroy all
remaining copies of that sucker! And, five seconds later, I thought, “Sca-rew that!” I thought of every zombie movie
I’d ever seen, story or book I’d ever read, song I’ve ever heard and thought,
“You know what, this is fiction! I’m not writing a dissertation, white paper or
biography on the living dead.” I slept a lot better after I’d come to terms
with that; hopefully, you will too.
·
Ignore it: One of the best, if
not the easiest, ways to deal with the review cloud is to simply ignore it. But
you have to get past it, stat, and stay there; if you write under the review
cloud for too long, or too often, you will simply lose all traces of your own,
unique and creative voice.
As you can see, it
doesn’t take much to step out from under the review cloud. The first step, of
course, is realizing you’re under it in the first place!
Yours in YA,
Rusty
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Great post, Rusty.
ReplyDeleteI know I've been there before, and on more than one occasion. Giving power to that cloud is terrible for the story you are working on, but also for your creative future. While in the 'cloud', your writing can suffer because you shy away from it completely. Your desire to sit down at the computer starts to fade away, and suddenly weeks have passed and you've accomplished nothing.
The cloud is a fickle beast, and ignoring it is a must. Otherwise it slowly steals away what everyone else loves about what you create! Your voice. Awesome post, my friend. Dare I say, down with the cloud?
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Hi Rusty, some good advice here!
ReplyDeleteWhat do you do when you get two contradictory reviews? Who do you decide to believe?
For example, I've gotten a review that says, "The entire book jumped around between different charcters and tried to tie them all together without much sucess."
BUT
I have another review saying, "Some of the stories intertwine, while still being consistent and it's fun to see how some of the characters from previous stories turn out in later ones or are viewed by other people."
After reading the titles of your books and just a few previews of them (so far), I can see we're monster-highschool-writing soulmates. Your book "Detention of the Living Dead" is eerily (almost too) similar to my own "Detention of the Bodysnatchers".
Good luck!
Terri