Guest Post by Jenny Ryan
Guest Blog Post for Chick Lit Plus
Do you remember Choose Your Own Adventures? I loved them when I was little ā they gave you such power when you read them. The charactersā fates were in your hands!
Recently, I began writing a āChoose Your Own Adventureā of sorts: Every week I post a chapter of a chick lit novel-in-progress and post it online. The chapter always ends with two choices — should Katie do A or B? The readers pick their favourite, and the choice with the most votes dictates how Iāll start the next chapter.
When I started, I didnāt know Iād end up writing a Choose Your Own Adventure. Initially, I just thought I was writing a character sketch.
One day this past winter I was outside shoveling the walk. As I shoveled, a character appeared. Her name was Katie, she had wanted to be an artist, she had wanted to have adventures, she had wanted an exceptional life. And yet she was single, in an office job, with a mortgage sheād never planned on and a wardrobe entirely too full of cardigans. While I heaved snow off my sidewalk, I came up with a scene of her daydreaming at work. I knew there was potential there. I threw the shovel down, went inside, and started to write.
After about 1,000 words I got stuck. I thought about calling my sister; she always has great ideas when I get writersā block. But I knew my friend A would probably have an idea, too. And my friend K — and T. All of these women had told me that they, like Katie, arenāt happy with their lives. āItās like I fell asleep and woke up inside someone elseās dream,ā one friend had recently confessed. I knew the feeling.
There are so many people who share Katieās story — a whole lot of us who arenāt sure how we ended up where we are, and arenāt convinced itās where we should be. I knew this could be my audience. I decided I would post the story online, so that all these kindred spirits could meet Katie. And I had this flash of inspiration — I had to let the readers tell me what to write next. After all, itās a story a lot of us are living. We might as well tell it together.
From a writer’s perspective, this is a challenging experiment. So much of writing is about isolation and creating intimate experiences with the characters. When writing a traditional novel, you share your drafts with a trusted group of confidantes, but when you work in the open, without an editor, and you publish instantly, and then you let the readers tell where you should take the story (often in a direction you hadnāt been expecting) — it’s a whole new way to write.
From a reader’s perspective, this publishing platform allows the readers to direct the narrative. Women, especially chick lit readers, love discussing the worlds inside novels. Iām creating a new kind of reading experience where readers get to give feedback about what they’d like to happen to the characters they are becoming invested in. It’s a whole new way to read, as well as a new way to write.
So how long will I write this story for? I canāt tell you that. How will it end? I canāt tell you that, either. Not because itās a secret — itās because I donāt know. I canāt make outlines, I canāt make plans. I canāt tell you if Katie will fix her leaking basement, I canāt tell you if sheāll fall in love, if her alcoholic sister will sober up, if sheāll put on that art show sheās been dreaming about. I hope these things happen, but itās not really up to me. Itās up to all of us to decide her fate.
Join me, Katie, and the rest of the community at youweregoingtobefantastic.blogspot.com.
Jenny Ryan is a librarian, improv actor, and snack food aficionado living in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.