The Magician Never Enjoys The Show

by David Rawlings, @DavidJRawlings

I really feel sorry for magicians who still enjoy watching magic shows.

It must be hard to enjoy another magician’s skills when you know how the trick works.  Once you know how it’s done, it can remove the mystique for you, as well as your capacity to be amazed. Or you watch the performance mentally checking off how you’d improve it.

I’m like that with music. I’ll watch a band play and it’s very difficult to not notice missed cues, bum notes from the bass guitar or the ending where the drummer left everyone hanging. It’s even harder when I’m in front of a worship team.

Writers can be the same when we read. We see the structure behind the writing, the characterisations behind the characters and try to guess where the plot is going because we saw the foreshadowing.

We know how the tricks work.

It can be hard to enjoy another writer’s skills when you know how the craft works.

But we can’t lose our capacity for wonder as readers. There is great reward in reading as a reader, not as a writer who can see how the ‘trick’ works. I try very hard to take off my professional hat and immerse myself in a story for the sake of reading. Professional development can wait.  

Now I’m enjoying the extraordinary gift that writers have. Their art. Their ability. Their talent in entertaining me or taking me to a place that is far removed from my own.

writing-novel-start

And this is what I’ve found.

The specialness of words

One of the things that drives me as a writer is that I love language.  I like language like my University professors – the cleverer the better. To me, language is the tool with which we create.  And the more intricate the tool, the more engaged I am with a story; a world; a character and their journey.  Language done well is a joy; I appreciate that the cleverer the turn of phrase the more energy and time has gone into it. Like this:

  • Doug Wilson: who described the Left Behind series as “Hardy Boys in the Apocalypse.”  That one made me chuckle at the time. Still does.
  • Ted Dekker: “The world’s bumper sticker reads: Life sucks, and then you die. Perhaps Christian bumper stickers should read: Life sucks, but then you find hope and you can’t wait to die.”  I’m a big admirer of Ted Dekker’s work, but this phrase stayed with me because it painted life as it is, with the reward at the end.  A nice tumble in half-pike position.
  • Charlie Brooker: “I glide through the social whirl with all the elegance of a dog in high heels.”  You can just picture that, can’t you?
  • From the movie Interstellar: “We’re just here to be memories for our kids.”  At a desperate stage of the movie, this quote summed up a character’s frustration, anger and hopelessness in the moment.
  • Frank Peretti: “So what do you do for a living? Staying alive is nice, but you can’t do that forever. It’s how you live the life you have while you have it.”  Just a nice piece of advice buried in the book Monster.
  • James L Rubart: “Toren stared at her, several emotions flitting across his eyes in a matter of seconds. Surprise. Pain, Anger? No, not anger, frustration. And innocence. And then, resolve.” I just love Jim’s description. I can picture the change in Toren’s wife’s demeanor, including his misinterpretation of frustration at something it wasn’t. All done in twelve words.

Brilliance in plotting

  • The twist in The Sixth Sense. Just. Brilliant. There’s an even better one in The Village by the same writer.
  • The foreshadowing in Ted Dekker’s Skin: The small things the characters notice that all piece together in the final few scenes, where you sit back and go “ooohhhh, so that’s what that is.” I love that. Like the black contrails in the sky or the forcefield that keeps characters away from one part of town. (I won’t spoil it for you).

Characters

  • Mark Billingham’s Tom Thorne – a hard-nosed detective who is abrasive and rough, but likes country music. What a great, surprising contrast.
  • The antagonist in Ben Elton’s Time And Time Again is more than a crusty old academic – Professor McCluskey is so real I could imagine talking to her.  And it’s the little things – the wanting cognac for breakfast drawn from the same teapot she’s used for decades, drawing schoolyard level pictures in the steam on a window or drizzling honey on bacon and eggs – that made her real.

I’m glad I read those as a wide eyed reader rather than a craftsman studying the craft.

I don’t know if this is hard for you like it is for me. I’d encourage you to put your professional hat away and enjoy someone else’s gift for what it is.

Then, after you’ve savored it, reach for the hat and aim to replicate or better what you’ve just read. But only after you’ve enjoyed it.


Based in South Australia, David Rawlings is a sports-mad father-of-three with his own copywriting business who reads everything within an arm’s reach.  He has published in the non-fiction arena and is now focused on writing contemporary Christian stories for those who want to dive deeper into life.  He is currently signed with Thomas Nelson and represented by The Steve Laube Agency.  His debut novel – The Baggage Handler – will be released in March 2019.

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