I've been re-reading T.H. White's classic, The Once and Future King. It's been many and many a year, and it has somehow got better with time. Some aspects strike me as relevant to us as writers, so I'm writing a post (or two) about that.
First is being learned. White knows his Mallory inside and out. But he also knows tons about hunting, including falconry and boar hunting. He is deeply knowledgeable about English history, including the many myths that trot alongside it. He knows not merely about dogs but about medieval dogs and little-remembered hunting breeds. There's more, but you get the idea.
I do not suggest we all ought to become historians (Heaven forfend!), but it's clear to me on this re-read that the only way the author could flesh out that world so thoroughly is by knowing it thoroughly. I've never been far into the camp of "read books to learn how to write books", but here we see a different reason to read lots of books: to become learned. To know a subject area--it can be something as simple as knowing a place or knowing a craft--so thoroughly that it is ready to hand as you write. It lets you construct sentences and scenes smoothly, adroitly, the way a musician can create variations on a theme when they are well versed in all the forms of scales and chords.
Second is caring about your characters. There is a plot here; indeed, one of the many brilliant accomplishments of White is that he managed to find a solid, modern plot in the morass of Mallory and Tennyson. More remarkably, he found real people in there. Wart and Jenny and Lance are such vivid re-imaginings, they are very nearly his own creations. It's telling that no one else, not even Mordred, gets a modernized nickname.
It becomes evident early and is reinforced many times that White was sympathetic to Arthur, saw Guinevere as admirable, and Lancelot as tragically flawed. Well, all three are flawed, but we see the flaws manifest in different ways over the course of the books. But I don't think authors write memorable books with memorable characters without caring deeply about those characters. White takes his time with each of them. He doesn't merely throw obstacles in their way, he shows them succeeding, being silly, being kind--in short, being fully human. You can't invest that kind of time and effort without caring.
So, there are a couple of things I got from White this time round. I'll make a second post to show examples of his skill. Those are harder to learn from, and I'll talk a little about why that is.
If others here have read these books, feel free to chime in.
First is being learned. White knows his Mallory inside and out. But he also knows tons about hunting, including falconry and boar hunting. He is deeply knowledgeable about English history, including the many myths that trot alongside it. He knows not merely about dogs but about medieval dogs and little-remembered hunting breeds. There's more, but you get the idea.
I do not suggest we all ought to become historians (Heaven forfend!), but it's clear to me on this re-read that the only way the author could flesh out that world so thoroughly is by knowing it thoroughly. I've never been far into the camp of "read books to learn how to write books", but here we see a different reason to read lots of books: to become learned. To know a subject area--it can be something as simple as knowing a place or knowing a craft--so thoroughly that it is ready to hand as you write. It lets you construct sentences and scenes smoothly, adroitly, the way a musician can create variations on a theme when they are well versed in all the forms of scales and chords.
Second is caring about your characters. There is a plot here; indeed, one of the many brilliant accomplishments of White is that he managed to find a solid, modern plot in the morass of Mallory and Tennyson. More remarkably, he found real people in there. Wart and Jenny and Lance are such vivid re-imaginings, they are very nearly his own creations. It's telling that no one else, not even Mordred, gets a modernized nickname.
It becomes evident early and is reinforced many times that White was sympathetic to Arthur, saw Guinevere as admirable, and Lancelot as tragically flawed. Well, all three are flawed, but we see the flaws manifest in different ways over the course of the books. But I don't think authors write memorable books with memorable characters without caring deeply about those characters. White takes his time with each of them. He doesn't merely throw obstacles in their way, he shows them succeeding, being silly, being kind--in short, being fully human. You can't invest that kind of time and effort without caring.
So, there are a couple of things I got from White this time round. I'll make a second post to show examples of his skill. Those are harder to learn from, and I'll talk a little about why that is.
If others here have read these books, feel free to chime in.

Auror
Myth Weaver