Scott on Writing

Musings on technical writing...

Do You Write Fiction?

I used to write a lot of fiction, starting back in elementary school and continuing through high school.  This came to a rather abrupt end starting in college, and I've often wondered why.  If you didn't know anything about the school I went to, the University of Missouri - Rolla, then you might think that perhaps the busy social life college presents distracted my from writing.  But, if you have heard of Rolla, or experienced UMR, then you know that Rolla is in the middle of nowhere, has a ratio of four guys to every girl, and is about as socially rambunctious as a funeral parlor in a war-stricken corner of the world.

Fellow UMR alums might conclude that Rolla merely sucked the life force and creative juices from my very marrow.  But, if this explanation were true, then wouldn't the fiction writing resume upon my escape from Rolla?  When I graduated from UMR I came out here to San Diego and, initially, tried to restart the writing.  First, I tried to just sit down and write.  Sadly, that didn't go to well.  After struggling with getting started writing fiction again, I decided to step up my efforts, and started going to a weekly Writer's Workshop.  This workshop took place every Wednesday from 1:00 to 2:00 in the afternoon.  Due to its working-day hours, the group was me, unemployed people, and housewives.  Don't get me wrong, there were some very talented writers in the group - some of those unemployed folks were starving artists, working on the American Novel.

The woman organizing the event started each session by announcing the germ of our writing by means of a simple sentence.  The one that sticks out in my mind was, "I came into the kitchen, and pudding was everywhere."  Then, we took this idea and wrote for half an hour to 45 minutes, after which we shared our works with the others by reading them aloud.

While the workshop was entertaining and a good break, the writing during the meeting still felt forced.  During these writing workshop visits, though, I was starting to date the woman who would become my fiancee and soon-to-be-wife, so that provided some inspiration for writing.  What I often found myself doing, though, was writing at home when the fancy struck, and then, essentially, repeating my earlier writings at the workshop, trying desperately to fit them into the starter-sentence given to us for that day.

I stopped going to the workshop after a month and a half, or so, but what really has stuck in my mind since attending is the stark difference in reality-perception between myself and some of the other writers.  Some of the better fiction writers at this workshop always wrote about the same set of fictional characters, and the events that transpired.  In the socialization that inevitible occured both before and after the workshop, these people would talk about these characters as if the really existed.  They'd let people know what events had recently transpired for these characters, and what was new in their "lives."  It's as if these people could write fiction so well because they had a hard time disambiguating between fact and fiction in reality.

So, sadly, I haven't written fiction since high school.  Sure, there were some short bursts a couple years ago soon after moving to San Diego, but nothing I'm especially proud of.  This leads me back to my original question - why is it that I used to be able to write fiction so fluidly, but can do so no longer?  The answer, I fear, is computer science.

In order to be a good computer programmer, your mind has to be trained to think in a very straightforward, logical way.  With logic (and therefore computer science), there are infallible rules that govern how reality functions.  If a implies b, and a occurs, then b will occur.  By its very name, fiction does not imply such rigidity.  Writing fiction and programming comptuers pits the mind in a conflict, and either the programming or the fiction is bound to suffer.

Do these ideas hold merit?  Can one be a stellar computer programmer and a superb author of fiction?  I have no doubt that there are some insanely brilliant individuals who can do both exceptionally well, but I'd be willing to wager dollars to donuts that writing fiction and programming are diametric tasks.

posted on Tuesday, August 05, 2003 11:16 AM

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# re: Do You Write Fiction? 8/8/2003 9:57 AM Rob S.

Oooh, I don't agree. A good programmer and a good novelist have something in common-- the ability to comprehend the gestalt of a complex organism.

Think about it this way. . . if you're working on a massively complex program, you're probably trying to coordinate dozens of objects, with their own discrete tasks to make something that, as a whole, "works."

The novelist also needs to keep track of multiple story lines (e.g. objects), individual characters (more objects? I don't know), as well as sub-plots, backstories, etc. (e.g. discrete tasks).

As well, a good developer must be creative to overcome the technical stumbling blocks that always rise up to meet us-- and we both know that creativity is the foundation skill of being a novelist (a fiction writer without creativity is--- hmmmm.... William C. Deitz?).

# re: Do You Write Fiction? 8/8/2003 5:18 PM Dave Burke

I loved this post, Scott. I wrote some fiction prior to immersing myself into programming. Rob S. is obviously a writer, and I would suggest, a writer first, and programmer second. I can barely READ fiction anymore, let alone write it. I have a musical background and can still enjoy it, but writing fictional or long narratives, ahhh, I guess we still have the chops, but the question must be asked: "why write fiction?" or "What is most satisfying?" It's a question of how we expend a finite amount of word-derived creative energy. Seeing your obvious talent in programming and technical writing, I would guess it isn't much of a question for you anymore. Or I could be full of crap?

# re: Do You Write Fiction? 8/9/2003 7:37 AM Scott Mitchell

Glad you liked the post, Dave, and thanks for your comments Rob. I am like you, Dave, I used to read a lot of fiction (prior to high school), but now read mostly non-fiction, like biographies, books on history, or anthropology books like Jared Diamond's The Third Chimpanzee and Guns, Germs, and Steel.

I am the first to admit I may be full of crap, so who knows if computers (or Rolla) are what are to blame. Maybe it's just age? :-)

# re: Do You Write Fiction? 8/11/2003 3:44 AM Rob S.

System Architect first, writer distant second.

:)

# re: Do You Write Fiction? 6/14/2004 6:26 PM Shai

I found your blog through the blog of another computer book author also named Scott. I'm glad I followed the link. Your posts are informative and entertaining. I'm preparing a list of blogs by writers at my Web Logs site at About.com (http://weblogs.about.com/) and I'd like to include yours.

Anyway, to answer your question, yes, I used to write fiction too. 'Got a few published, including a children's picture book. However, this stopped about five years ago. Not sure if my fiction writing is ever coming back.

I've only started venturing in to technical writing.

# Going to Try My Hand at Fiction... Eventually 7/13/2004 10:52 AM Scott on Writing

# re: Do You Write Fiction? 10/1/2004 2:59 PM jj

no

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