Last week I read a book by a favorite author that was,
frankly, disappointing. I identified the problem about halfway through: too
much time spent on backstory. I don’t remember this being an issue with this
author in the past, but I imagined an editor saying, “People like characters
with personal struggles that have nothing to do with the story. They eat that
shit up.”
Not all people.
Backstory is like research: don’t use any more than is
necessary. The author should at least have an idea, but the reader doesn’t have
to know everything. The way to develop characters is in the context of what’s
happening now. The backstory and research should seem to live between the lines
as much as possible.
Several years ago a good friend or mind (yes, I have them),
a sorely underrated author, was taken to task by the critic for a major
newspaper because the critic wanted to know why
the drug dealer had become a drug dealer. I read the book. It didn’t matter.
The man was a drug dealer when the book started. Unless his background was
unique and important to the story—which it was not—it’s not germane. The book wasn’t about that. It was about what’s
happening now.
This is among the reasons I detest serial killer stories.
(The book in question has a serial killer, but that’s not what the book is really
about.) I do not care about the psychological underpinnings of this asshole’s
need to seduce, rape, mutilate, and kill women. It may be important to the
cops, but even they don’t need to know everything.
Just tell us what we need to make sense of things. You know, leave out the
parts we’d tend to skip, like I did the parts of the book under discussion where
the killer describes his crimes in a journal. The author had already presented
him as a sick fuck. Everything else was piling on.
Hint at backstory. Tease the reader with it. Here are two
outstanding example, both from moves, but movies where the writing was
paramount.
In Spike Lee’s Inside
Man, screenwriter Russell Gewirtz tells us nothing of Dalton Russell’s
(Clive Owen) background, except that he knows things about Arthur Case
(Christopher Plummer) no one else knows. How does he know these things? Doesn’t
matter. He knows them and the whole story revolves around what Russell is
willing, and not willing, to do about it.
We do get insights into Detective Keith Frazier’s (Denzel
Washington) background. He’s pondering marriage but has financial concerns.
He’s also under a cloud due to a large sums of money that went missing from a
previous case. Both matter to the story, as the suspicion makes his assignment
to thie case tenuous, and his marital dilemma provides opportunity for a peek
inside Russell’s character. (If you haven’t seen Inside Man, by all means do so. It’s wonderful, start to finish.)
Another, micro, example is from Deadwood: The Movie, written by David Milch. In a crowd scene near
the end where the townspeople pelt series villain George Hearst (Gerald
McRaney) with all manner of projectiles and invective, a man in the crowd
hollers out, “I hope you die in the street like my father.” There’s an epithet,
and a hint at why the man said it, all in ten words. Let your mind explore the
possibilities. All Milch had to do was open the door. (As Timothy Olyphant said
in the interview that drew my attention to this, “Wow. Backstory.”.)
Backstory, research, and description all exist to support
the story, not crush it. Engage the reader’s mind. We all caution to “show,
don’t tell” but what is it but telling to say the character was
“Six-feet-one-inch tall, with blue eyes and brown hair that grazed his ears and
collar. He had a well-defined nose with bumps that hinted at multiple breaks
and fingers disproportionately thick for his hands.” How much of that do we
need to know? He’s tall, but not exceptionally so. Unless his eyes and hair
come into play later, why not leave them to the reader’s imagination?
2 comments:
I agree.
Your post reminded me of a scene from “Escape from Alcatraz” where Clint Eastwood’s character is talking to another prisoner in the exercise yard and he tells the guy (and us) all we need to know of his background.
Prisoner: I turned 35 today. Some birthday! When's your birthday?
Eastwood: I don't know.
Prisoner: Geez, what kind of childhood did you have?
Eastwood: Short.
(Those lines were posted on the IMDb site. My memory isn’t that good.)
That is exactly what I'm talking about. Thanks.
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