Tagged: critique

Spoiler Telepathy

r-avatarAn important way that we’ve kept one foot in the writing universe while distracted from our usual routine is by attending our critique group meetings. In that environment, we are sometimes two people and sometimes just one.

If the work being critiqued is someone else’s, then Kent and Jen each provide separate feedback. Rune Skelley, per se, doesn’t offer any suggestions. However, when it’s Rune Skelley’s pages under discussion, then it’s Rune Skelley sitting at the table. We pass significant looks and sometimes literally pass notes to each other, but Jen usually finds just stepping on Kent’s foot under the table is enough to make her point.

The need for all this clandestine communication arises from spoilers. Maybe not every critique group runs this way, but we like to get “an honest read” on our material. Plot points and character motivations often look quite different when you’re clued in about where it all leads, which means a spoiled reader will see connections that others might miss. To get a feel for whether the story is tracking, we keep our readers in the dark.

But the whole point of the group is to talk shop. Sometimes you want to throw out hypothetical edits and see if people feel they’d improve the flow or clarity. Sometimes you simply need to confirm, “You guys know Wiggins robbed the bank and Jinks is just taking the fall, right?” Delving into real analysis of the text means flirting with spoilers.

This is where telepathy comes in handy. With a quirked eyebrow, Kent can ask if it’s okay to bring up a plot detail, and Jen will know which one he means. We can ride the line to keep our readers honest while still being able to have a conversation with them. And if Kent starts to babble, Jen can always step on his foot.

Collaborating in a Critique Group

We are currently participating in a writing workshop with author Carolyn Turgeon. The format is quite different from our regular critique group, but in both cases we, being collaborators, are unique. Perhaps I should say that Rune Skelley is unique. Jen and Kent are equivalent, and thus non-unique.

Pedantry aside, how do collaborators participate in a critique group? Do you alternate who offers feedback from week to week? Do you take turns finishing each others’ sentences? The way we’ve chosen to handle it is by presenting one piece of work for critique, and adding two voices and opinions to the discussions of other authors’ work. Our co-critiquers seem to like this arrangement. It gives them twice as much input on their own piece, without requiring twice the time commitment to read our stuff.

It does take discipline though, not to launch into a private conversation with your co-author during the meeting. A reader will ask a question or make an observation that sparks a Big Idea and you’ll want to talk about it. You really will. But you have to stay focused on the meeting. No one wants to sit and watch the two of you talk cryptically, or argue. You have to save all of that for the car ride home.

The car ride home is the best time to discuss the feedback you’ve just received, while it’s all still fresh in your minds. Having a writing partner to go through it all with is an invaluable tool. There will sometimes be comments that you don’t feel are valid, and if your partner agrees, then you can probably dismiss them. Other times though, one of you will be dismissive and the other won’t. That’s when things get interesting. Chances are the critique is valid, and without that second set of ears it might have been ignored.

One caveat: when you’re both madly in love with your project, it can be terribly easy to talk yourselves out of taking any of the critique to heart.

Kent: Man, I can’t believe how blind our readers were this week! None of them noticed the clever anagram of the name of that obscure scientist, or that we used the word “eight” exactly eight times!

Jen: I know! How could they ALL have totally missed the point of that scene?!

Do you participate in a critique group? Do you want to know more about how ours operate? Let us know in the comments.