When writing about Anna
Karenina recently, I
remembered a passage from Sophia Tolstoy's diaries. I only had to
type a few words into Google, and voila, there it was. I copied it
into my blog post, but something else regarding his thoughts stayed
with me. What lingered was this:
"Yesterday L.N went to
his table, pointed at his notebook and said "Oh how I long to
finish this novel (Anna Karenina) and start something new. My ideas
are quite clear now. If a work is to be really good there must be one
fundamental idea in that one loves. I love the idea of family; in War
and Peace I loved the idea of the people because of the 1812 war; and
now I see clearly that in my next book I shall love the idea of the
Russian peoples powers of expansion."
His great novels had to do
with being in love with an idea. Authors are commonly asked this question: How did you come up with the idea for your book? It speaks
to the heart of the matter. We all have tons of ideas; we
may even have notebooks full of concepts for novels. Once decided
upon, our love for the idea must remain in the forefront of our minds
for years.
When my father died, I did
not want him to go. I didn't want to forget about him either. I
wanted to cling to everything I could remember about him and keep it in my mind
forever. It is this idea I am currently in love with, bringing my father back to life. Folly? Yes, no doubt. Can a person we loved appear as a character whom the reader
can picture? Can I recreate a certain time in my life, 1961 to
1971, to be exact? Can my interpretation of the sixties rekindle
memories for others? Can I bring readers into my story? As I have
other family members I am missing now who have gone on to join my Dad, I
am in love with remembering them too: I am in love with this idea of
family, just as Tolstoy was when he wrote Anna Karenina. Even though I am not in possession of his talent, not within a country mile of it in fact, I still persist. Why? The answer is simple: love. I have
a love for my Dad, for my Mom, for my sister and brother, who are all
up in heaven now. I have a love for my old neighborhood, for my old
home, for my grandparents and aunts and uncles. I have a love for my
city and my country. There is no end to my love. Being in love with
an idea, can fill up a lot of pages. The one fundamental idea of my
story can be boiled down to the old adage that blood is thicker than
water.
Where does it come from, this
love? Does it spring from the same wellspring of our most universal
emotion, or is it more academic than that?
If you
write a novel and get on a talk show, someone will ask you how you
came up with the idea for your story. You will have to think back to
that first spark and be able to elaborate. If your face lights up and
your speech becomes more animated, so much the better. Enthusiasm is
infectious: people see it and want to have that same feeling. Readers want to be in love with ideas too. When I gaze at the picture above, knowing I was the baby stuffed into the snowsuit, I see us all as a fun loving, keen and zestful bunch with good times, too numerous to count, just around the corner. When this picture was taken the Queen was beginning her reign and we were part of suburban life, in the post-war years, in Toronto. The future looked bright and rosy back then. We were on the dawn of a new era, marked by hope. We all had our parts to play and we certainly played them.
How does this story end? Stay tuned...
How does this story end? Stay tuned...
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