Monday, May 23, 2011

Writing or Story?

Monday morning question (*groans all around*):


Would you rather readers admire your writing, or become engrossed in the story?

Um...BOTH? *heh heh* :D


According to Noah Lukeman, who wrote THE FIRST FIVE PAGES, "You must realize that when a reader gets lost in your story, turns pages rapidly and does not notice your writing, they are paying you the HIGHEST compliment. "

And I get that now. I mean, I want my sentences to be pretty, but I also want my readers to have a hard time putting the book down.


Even still, I fiddle around with word choice and sentence structure constantly. It's how you grow.


What do you think?

20 comments:

S.A. Larsenッ said...

I think I'd cry if a reader told me they were lost in my story. :) A huge compliment.

Stina said...

Story is extremely important. It's the emotion of the book. But if the writing is jarring, it will yank you right out of the story. :P

Jessica Bell said...

I actually disagree with that quote. There are plenty of stories I've gotten lost in where I've admired the writing. Enough to even underline stuff!

Laura Pauling said...

I really think it's both. But story is the must have. Even with beautiful writing, I'll put down a book where the story doesn't draw me in. When I find a book with both? I'm a fan.

storyqueen said...

Both!! Yes!

However, in my dreams, I get the comment "beautifully imagined."

I don't even know what that means all the way...but it sounds so purty!

Shelley

Liz Mays said...

It's a balance. You're so right!

Angie said...

I think that's it exactly. I want them not to notice the writing at all, but to be lost in the story. It takes good writing to make that happen, I think.

Ben Spendlove said...

I'm tempted to claim they're the same thing, but then I think of books like THE BOOK THIEF. Lovely writing? Absolutely. Lost in the story? Nope.

Maddy said...

I appreciate good writing, but I think the story is what keeps me coming back for more :)

Colene Murphy said...

Both, yes!! But if I had to pick, I'd rather it was an engrossing story. I LOVE beautiful writing but, in the end, the story is what counts IMO.

Lourie said...

I love it when I am lost in the story. When the world around me IS the story because it is that good. I hope to write that way one day!

Lindsay said...

I love getting lost in the story, too. I think it's a balancing act sometimes. I love beautiful writing, but I if the writing is beautiful, but not the story, I may never finish it. That makes me sad, but I need to connect and want to read on. I'm an odd one. LOL.

Donea Lee said...

I'm hoping that my stellar writing is what makes my story so engrossing in the first place ~ :) Both - is my hope!

Bethany Elizabeth said...

I think both are pretty important, but an engrossing story is vital. :)

Faith E. Hough said...

Yeah, I think "Both" is a good answer. But Lukeman is right. And the better your writing is, I think the less noticeable it is to most readers: it just lets your story shine, and perhaps they will notice more on a second reading. The sentences we tend to notice are the awkward ones...

Abby Minard said...

I would love for my readers to get lost in the story! But yes, if your writing is awesome, they won't even notice it! I have on occasion, found a book that had great writing, but the story was flat. I'd much rather have an engrossing story where the writing wasn't perfect prose all the time.

Meredith said...

Yes, I'd answer both, too! But the books I love are the books with the best stories, the ones that keep me turning the page.

D. U. Okonkwo said...

It's definitely a huge compliment for a reader to feel your book is unputdownable. That's what we all aspire to.

Dina's Days said...

I like a little bit of both. Writing can be so hard, but worth the effort.
Hope you're doing well, need to catch up on your blog. :)

Matthew MacNish said...

I often can't get into the story unless the writing is at least marginally interesting ... but in the long run, I do think the story is the more important of the two.

If Sydney Carton had not [SPOILER ALERT] given himself up at the end, all the beautiful prose from A Tale of Two Cities would not have stuck with us as well through the centuries.