Many thanks
to all of you who tossed some new topic ideas at me (here and on Twitter). I think this might fill up all the slots I
had for the rest of the year. I may even
take some time to rethink my upcoming plans.
Anyway, for
now, the potential Sherlock Holmes idea stuck in my head, so let me babble
about that for a minute or three.
There’s a
pair of terms that have been floating around for a bit now—Watsonian and
Doylist. On the off chance you
don’t get the reference, the terms come from Dr. John (or Joan) Watson,
constant companion to Sherlock Holmes, and also to their creator, Sir Arthur
Conan Doyle. When we use these terms,
we’re saying there’s two ways to look at any story element. The in-story reason for this happening,
and the author’s reason for this happening. They’re often very different, but they’re
both very important.
For
example...
Why did
Sherlock Holmes die in “The Final Problem,” plunging to his death at Reichenbach
Falls ? Well, from Watson’s point of view, Holmes
sacrificed himself because it was the only way to stop Moriarty. The two evenly-matched men fight, and while
Holmes dies, Moriarty’s now-leaderless criminal empire will crumble. A net win for society.
From Doyle’s
point of view, though, he was just sick of writing Sherlock Holmes
stories. He was making money off them, yeah,
but he wanted to move on and start writing more serious, important stuff about,
well... ghosts and fairies. No, seriously. So he killed
Holmes off and tried (unsuccessfully) to move on.
Yeah, don’t
be the person pointing out Doyle later retconned the death. When he wrote this story, Holmes was dead. Toast. Joined the choir invisible.
Of course,
this principal doesn’t just apply to Sherlock Holmes stories. If you look at most stories, the elements
break down into these two categories.
--Why
did Han Solo get frozen in carbonite?
The Watsonian reason is that Vader wanted to test the carbon-freezing
process and Boba Fett wanted to collect on Solo’s sizeable bounty. The Doylist reason is that Harrison Ford
wasn’t sure he wanted to come back to play Solo again, so George Lucas needed
an ending that could explain Solo’s potential absence but also contain the
possibility of bringing him back.
--Why
did the Twelfth Doctor regenerate?
Watsonian reason—he was shot by the Cybermen and managed to hold off his
regeneration briefly before transforming into the Thirteenth Doctor. Doylist—Peter Capaldi was leaving the series,
as was showrunner Stephen Moffat, and the new team decided to cast Jodie
Whittaker.
Here’s one of my own—Why does Ex-Patriots begin with a Fourth of July fireworks show? Well, from a Watsonian point of view, the citizens of the Mount are celebrating. It’s the Fourth, but it’s also one of their first major holidays since things have (for them) kinda stabilized after the zombocalypse. So they’re partying hard.
Here’s one of my own—Why does Ex-Patriots begin with a Fourth of July fireworks show? Well, from a Watsonian point of view, the citizens of the Mount are celebrating. It’s the Fourth, but it’s also one of their first major holidays since things have (for them) kinda stabilized after the zombocalypse. So they’re partying hard.
From a
Doylist point of view, though... this opening lets me start with action. There’s a lot going on. It gives me a chance to re-introduce our four
main heroes. It also lets be immediately bring up the idea of nations and
patriotism, which are key themes in the book.
Heck, because this was one of those very rare times where I knew
there’d be another book in the series, this was also a setup for a plot thread
in Ex-Communication.
This all makes sense, yes?
This all makes sense, yes?
Why are we
talking about it?
I think
it’s really important to remember these distinctions when we’re talking about
writing. To be more specific, when we’re
talking about aspects of writing. If
we’re discussing dialogue or characters or settings, we should be clear if this
is an in-world discussion or an authorial discussion. Are we talking about things as they relate to
the characters, or as they relate to the author (and the audience)?
“Authorial”? Ooooh, don’t I sound all clever...
For
example, once or thrice I’ve mentioned my belief that all good, successful characters have three common traits—they’re believable, they’re
relatable, and they’re likable. But I’ve
seen some pushback on this. I’ve had
people online and in person argue that characters don’t need to be
likable. Characters just need to be
fascinating or compelling or... well, look.
They don’t need to be likable.
Here’s the
thing. In a Watsonian sense—I agree with
this. I mean, I’ve said this myself lots
of times (pretty much every time I talk about these traits). Likable doesn’t mean we want a character to marry into our family and they always have a kind word to say. Within the story, there are tons of popular protagonists
who aren’t remotely likable. Who are
kind of awful, really. There’s not a
version of Hannibal Lecter—books, movies, or television—that most of us would
want to have a private dinner with. We
probably couldn’t count the number of books and movies that have hit men or
assassins as their main characters. And
to bring us back around, most modern interpretations of Sherlock Holmes rightly
point out that the guy’s an abrasive, condescending ass.
(...and
that’s with the people he likes.)
But in a Doylist
sense, viewed from outside... we kinda like these people. We admire Lecter’s twisted ethics. We envy the ultra-competent man
or woman of action. And it’s kind of
pleasant to watch Holmes point out what’s sitting right in front of everyone’s
face. That separation of fiction, the
thin sheath that keeps us from absolutely immersing into the story, lets us
enjoy these characters in ways we couldn’t in real life.
I mean if
we didn’t like them as readers, why would we keep reading about them? Who’d torture themselves like
that. Hell, why would we keep writing
about them if we didn’t like them? I
can’t imagine sitting down and working for months on a story about a character
I didn’t enjoy on some level.
This holds
for so a lot of aspects of writing. I’ve
mentioned before that realistic dialogue in fiction is different from the actual conversations we have with each other in the real world. Other characters might not get my
protagonist, but the reader should be able to relate to them. And I’m never going to be able build any sort
of tension if I don’t understand the difference between what my readers know and what my character knows.
Y’see,
Timmy, when I’m taking in advice I need to be clear if we’re talking about
things in a Watsonian or Doylist sense.
And when I see advice from other writers, I should stop and think about
how they mean it. Are they talking about
the actual pace of events in the timeline of the story, or the pacing in the
narrative? Are they talking about the
motives of the characters or the writer?
In the
future, I’m going to try to be better about this, too.
Next
time...
Well,
thanks to some of you, I’ve got next time all planed out in advance.
Until then...
go write.
Often my characters don't quite know what's going on. But I'd better have a pretty good idea.
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