The Good, the Bad, and the Believable

From the time I learned I could string sentences together and create a story, I wanted to write.  I started with fairy tales with princesses and evil witches, and then moved on to barely more realistic stories peopled with righteous children and evil adults.  The characters were cardboard stereotypes – mean teachers, unhappy orphans, and on and on.  People were either good or bad – there was no in-between.  It’s the way the world seemed to me as a child.  Everything was right or wrong, good or bad, fair or unfair.

Of course as we grow up we realize that the world is full of ambiguity, that most people straddle the fence between good and bad at some times in their lives.  Things are complicated.  I want the books I read to be complicated. I want the characters to be fully realized, complicated beings.  I want to feel empathy for even the most unlikable character.

As I’ve said many times, I don’t care a thing about liking the characters in a story or book.  Some of the greatest characters in literature are basically unlikable people (the first that comes to mind is the protagonist in JM Coetzee’s Disgrace).  But there is always some humanity there, something that makes me want to stick with them long enough to find out what happens.  That humanity is what makes a good character.  Not good in the way I thought back when I wrote about those princesses, but good in a way that makes you say, yeah, I believe in this person.

I just finished reading Tom Rachman’s The Imperfectionists, and while I didn’t love the book as much as many critics did, I admire the way he made even the most unlikable characters sympathetic in some way.  In the author’s interview at the end of the book, Rachman addresses this. “Several (characters) are tricky types, the sorts who, had I met them in a newsroom, might have prompted me to run.  But on the page, I had fondness for them.  It’s the writing that did this.  To form these characters, I tried to conceive of their motives, resentments, disappointments … Writing (and reading) is a sort of exercise in empathy… (it) stirs compassion that, in real life, is so often obscured by our own motives.”

I love that.  “Stirs compassion that in real life is so often obscured by our own motives.”  I believe that the best fiction does this, for the reader and the writer.  That’s what I want in my own stories.

Lucky Writing Charms

Writers can be a superstitious lot.  And while I’ve never carried a four leaf clover or worried about walking under a ladder, I do have to admit that I am guilty of a bit of superstition when it comes to my writing.

I have writing charms.  It’s not that I believe they make me write better, or that they ward off writer’s block.  They just make me feel, well, more like Christy the Writer with a capital W.  No reason, really, except that they are important to me, and remind me of the people who believe in me and of the times when I felt most like a writer.

The first time I ever told anyone I was a writer was on my way to an artist’s retreat in Ireland.  My writing had always been a closet occupation – most of my friends didn’t even know I wrote.  I didn’t call myself a writer because I still didn’t believe that I was one.  But something happened when I was on a bus riding through Cork.  The bus driver, a lovely man I could barely understand, asked me what I was doing in southwest Ireland.  When he heard I was headed for Anam Cara, he asked, “So you’re a writer, then?”  And I said, “Yes, I am.”  And realized I actually believed it.  Because though I hadn’t been published yet, publication was not really what it meant to me to be a writer.  What I understood in that moment was that a writer is someone who writes, who needs to write, who spends precious vacation time at a desk struggling over sentences instead of lying on a beach working on a tan.

It was there in Ireland during my long walks along the strand to clear my head that I collected my lucky stones.  And I’ve carried them with me ever since.  Through all my moves, and residencies, and house sitting gigs, they’ve always been nearby to remind me what being a writer really means to me.

Though I haven’t been able to hang my board everywhere I’ve been, it’s always with me, sometimes leaning against a wall, sometimes lying on the floor nearby.  Long ago, when I christened my first dedicated writing space, my writing group came over and helped me welcome the muse into my new office.  They each wrote wishes for the space, and I still have those good wishes tacked up.  I’ve added a few quotes I like, and stuck a few other things up that mean something only to me.  But mostly the board reminds me of the wonderful women in my group who believed in me and believe in me still.

There are other things I always keep around the writing me:  pictures of my daughters, my first acceptance letter, a pink flamingo.  Can I write without them?  Absolutely. And I have.  But I’d really rather not.

My Top 10 Favorite Touristy Things to do in Charleston

I have a new friend who’s in Charleston for a month for work, and she asked me today what she should see and do while she’s here.  So I tried to remember back to when I lived down here before, and where I would take visitors who had never been to this wonderful place.  In doing so I remembered the magic of discovering some of these things myself, and it made me want to share them.

1)      The Battery.  One of my favorite places in the world.  The Battery is located at the southernmost tip of the Charleston Peninsula. If you’ve ever seen a picture of Charleston, it was probably of the Battery.  Incredible architecture, beautiful old oak trees, and an amazing view of historic Fort Sumter.

2)      Speaking of Fort Sumter, one of my favorite touristy things to do is to take the harbor tour out to Fort Sumter.  A great boat ride, and then you can wander around the fort where the Civil War began in earnest.

3)      Horse and carriage ride.  The tour guides are terrific, and it’s really the only way to see some of the old parts of the city other than walking.

4)      Food.  Lord, does Charleston have some great restaurants.  Magnolias, Husk, etc etc.

5)      St Michael’s Episcopal Church.  Charleston’s oldest church was built in 1764.  It’s beautiful, and the cemetery has graves dating from the Revolutionary War. I’m a sucker for cemeteries.

6)      Old City Market.  Lots of history, great shops, and restaurants.  What’s not to love?

7)      Arthur Ravenel, Jr. Bridge.  This is a new one for me – the bridge wasn’t built when I lived here before.  Park and walk across for some incredible views, or just drive over it into Mt. Pleasant, my stomping grounds.

8)      While you’re on that side of the bridge, go on through Mt P to the Isle of Palms.  Great beach, and some adorable shops.  I’m lucky enough to live 5 minutes from there.

9)      Or stay in Mt P and go to Shem Creek to eat on the water or go kayaking.

10)  If you still have time and energy, take in one of the many historic houses open to the public or tour a plantation just a short drive away.  Just a few:  Middleton Place, Magnolia Plantation and Gardens, Boone Hall Plantation, Drayton Hall, Edmondston-Alston House, Heyward-Washington House, Joseph Manigault House, Aiken-Rhett House, Nathaniel Russell House.

www.charlestoncvb.com has lots more information on things to do in Charleston, but these are my faves.  See y’all down here.