Please welcome Kathleen Marple Kalb to the blog…
LONG
STORY SHORT
How
the Pandemic Made Me a Short Story Writer
By Kathleen Marple Kalb (Nikki Knight)
I’ve always admired short story
writers. The ability to sketch vivid characters and tell a full story in a few
thousand words seemed like a magical thing. More, as a radio news anchor in my
day job, I know it’s actually a lot harder to write short than long. It’s a
gift.
One I was very sure I didn’t have.
Until 2020 pulled the rug out from
under all of us.
At that point, I was a debut mystery
author, firmly convinced that I’d spend the foreseeable future writing and
selling novels to all of those wonderful readers who were just waiting to see
me at the bookstore.
Sure they were.
By publication day, I was helping
teach Virtual Fourth Grade in my son’s bedroom, doing my weekend radio shifts
from my husband’s home office, and writing whenever I had five minutes and a
flat surface for a laptop. But at least I was still writing, working on the
next novel, even though everything just felt wrong.
Even the writing, which had never
happened before. Writing was always the thing that felt right, the escape from
my stressful world. I’d written much of
one book in the hospital waiting room during a family health crisis, so I knew
about working through tough stuff. But not this time. Whether it was the
stop-and-start from Virtual School, the energy drain of trying to sell a debut
book entirely on social media, or just the daily horror, this time, I just
wasn’t getting there.
Still, I kept at it. Kept myself
open to ideas.
And then my local Sisters in Crime chapter announced plans for a short-story anthology. I thought: “Okay. I’ll try it, just to show support – and give them something to reject.”
Really, I did.
I hadn’t realized what fun it could
be to write, and condense, and sharpen a story that way.
I also hadn’t realized how
satisfying it could be to start a project with a very clear goal and finish it
fairly quickly. The great thing about writing a novel is that you may not know
where you’re going until you’re partway there. It never occurred to me that
there was a lot of pleasure in knowing exactly what you have to do as you build
it.
That first story was so much fun, I
started looking for more short ideas, and wrote several, mostly involving
characters from my books in situations outside the main timeline. The process
of looking for short story ideas has helped me as a long-form writer too,
because I’ve learned to consider how much space a given plot needs.
That first story is now in a New
York/Tri-State Sisters in Crime anthology, after the advice and polishing of
two very smart and helpful editors. And another one of my stories will be in a
Creative James Media anthology early next year.
I’m still working on a couple of
novels. But I’m also still writing short stories when I get a good idea for
one.
And whatever I’m writing, I’m amazed
at how much I’ve learned by branching out into short stories.
The biggest lesson, though?
Never assume something isn’t for you. That you don’t have the right gift or the right skills…or that you wouldn’t enjoy it.
It might be just what you need.
Kathleen
Marple Kalb
is the author of the Ella Shane historical mystery series for Kensington Books,
and as Nikki Knight, the author of LIVE, LOCAL, AND DEAD, coming February 8,
2022 from Crooked Lane. She’s a weekend
radio anchor in New York City and a weekday mom in suburban Connecticut.
3 comments:
Kathleen, I appreciated your post. I had a similar experience writing and trying to run virtual third grade, and short stories were a great writing outlet. Congrats on your novel and your short story sales!
Thank you! It's good to hear I'm not the only one!
Great post, Kathleen! I enjoyed your story in Justice for All. Keep them coming!
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