J. Mark Bertrand

Bio

  • J. Mark Bertrand lectures at Worldview Academy and is the author of Rethinking Worldview: Learning to Think, Live, and Speak in This World (Crossway, 2007). After spending most of his life in Houston, Texas, he now lives with his wife Laurie in South Dakota. He has a BA in English from Union University and an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Houston, where he worked as production editor of the literary magazine Gulf Coast. For several years, he served on the board of Strange Land Literacy Foundation, a non-profit promoting literature, theology, culture studies and fellowship in Houston. Until recently, he was the fiction editor at Relief Journal, where he now serves on the advisory board.

Historical Note

  • Write About Now is the successor to my original fiction blog called Notes on Craft. The archive there is still online and dates from March 2004 to September 2007. Feel free to explore it at your leisure.

Thinking Aloud

April 24, 2008

Moral Fiction. Seriously.

I once considered titled my blog Snob Appeal, but in the end I worried the moniker didn't fit. Yes, I was a snob, but could I really claim to have an appeal? Probably not. But I'm particularly sensitive to snobbery. Not that I take umbrage; I'm more of a connoisseur. Mary Gordon's talk at the Calvin Festival was very fine in this regard, because she kept addressing her audience as "people who appreciate serious fiction," and contrasting our tastes with those of fundamentalists of every stripe.

The funny thing? This is the text of the article Gordon read, originally published in The Atlantic. I remember reading it -- and appreciating it. The second time around, I had my doubts -- not so much about the premise as the subtext.

Continue reading "Moral Fiction. Seriously." »

April 23, 2008

Authors, Published Authors, and Multi-Published Authors

Remember the Great Chain of Being? A similar hierarchy exists in the writing world, substituting for animal, man, and God the similarly stratified author, published author, and multi-published author. The terms aren't as self-explanatory as they seem. Authors are people who write. Published authors have a book out. Multi-published authors have several books out. But there is a mighty gulf fixed between author and published author -- and not just any publication will bridge it. For example, you could spend a lifetime publishing short stories in major journals and still not be considered by some a "published author." Sure, you've been published, but not in book form. By the same token, if you publish your own book, the odds are it won't count.

Legitimate publication gets you airborne, but you're still hugging the treeline. Up above the clouds are the multi-published authors. Technically, two books will get you there, but to maintain your altitude it's nice to have four or more, to be releasing new titles regularly.

I have one book out, two coming up in 2010, and two more after that. This means I'm currently a published author on track to become a multi-published author. So I'm not complaining about the hierarchy. I understand why the distinctions are helpful to think about, since most of us would like to make enough money at writing to keep doing it and end up with a shelf of good books at the end of our run. But there's one thing I object to: the terms themselves. They're not meant to sound arrogant, but I think they do. Plus, they are aggressively inelegant, which seems strange for a gaggle of wordsmiths.

Whenever I hear someone say "I'm a published author," it sounds like an expression of insecurity. I don't want you to confuse me with all these wannabes. I'm a published author. Fortunately, I've never heard anyone refer to herself as a "multi-published author" (someone else typically does that for you), but the phrase makes me cringe. It's sort of like the equally awkward "multi-Platinum artist," except that it refers not to awards but to the literary equivalent of albums. Imagine calling a band with two albums out a "multi-recorded artist."

I was explaining all this at the Calvin Festival, chatting with Michelle Pendergrass and Jennifer Tiszai, and one of them asked, "Then what are you going to call yourself when you have multiple books out?" An author, I said. That's hard enough, most days. If someone comes up with less artless terms, I'll consider them. In the meantime, if you ever hear me talking about being a published author or a multi-published author, you have my permission to shoot me.

April 21, 2008

How Do The Heavens Declare God's Glory?

This was originally posted at The Master's Artist back in 2006, following the Calvin Fesitval of Faith and Writing. I've just gotten back from the 2008 Festival, so it seems apropos.

The heavens declare the glory of God. So begins the nineteenth Psalm. Since so many of us conceive of our life calling along similar lines -- bringing glory to God -- it seemed only natural for me at the time to say what I'm about to share. I was at Mick Silva's blog, reading his report on the Calvin Festival, and I came across this comment from Susan Meissner:

We've (myself included) allowed the message to mess with the mechanics 'cause we think it's "the message" that makes the book Christian. Why can't it be the other way around? Why can't it be astounding literary style that points to an astoundingly creative God?
To which I replied: "The heavens declare the glory of God, and if we aspire to something remotely similar for our work, we could learn something from how the heavens do this (and don't)." So far so good. When I went back later, though, I found that Kathleen Popa had left a message for me. "Yes, go on...."

So I'd been caught! I should have known better than to proof text.

Continue reading "How Do The Heavens Declare God's Glory? " »

October 19, 2007

Face the Music

GlassWhat kind of music do you listen to as you write? I'm always fascinated by the answers people give, usually because I couldn't write to most of them. Heavy metal? No way. Country? Try again. One night a couple of years back, a novelist buddy let me read his latest manuscript right on the laptop screen, and as accompaniment he fired up the playlist he'd been writing to. That was wild, because the music and the words really fit. (He has much cooler taste than me, too.)

My go-to soundscape is the Michael Nyman catalog. I can write to any of it, though the soundtracks to Carrington and Ravenous are particular favorites. The past couple of days, for the first time in my life, I've been grooving to Philip Glass. The music in question is his Concerto for Violin and Orchestra. It's running on a loop in the background right now. Fertile sounds.

What about you? Any favorites?

October 11, 2007

What Athol Wrote ... About Me

If you missed Athol Dickson's comment on my earlier post, be sure to check out "Weaving In Jesus" over at his blog, What Athol Wrote. This started out as a comment he was going to post here, but it grew so long that he decided to make it a blog post. I'm glad, because it's definitely worth reading in full. I'm going to quote the conclusion, but the best thing is to click over and read the whole thing, so you get the complete context. Here goes:

"Christians of all people must attend to quality, because slip-shod work reflects directly on Jesus’ reputation among unbelievers. As with any theme in any novel, if the gospel is there it must be essential to the story, woven in from the outset as the very heart of the thing. This is the true message of Mystery and Manners, and it is not a Christian fiction issue in particular. It is Creative Writing 101."
The Big Question for Christian writers really isn't whether the Gospel will be present in our work, but rather how it will be present. The how might change from writer to writer, from book to book. One author might have a single spiritual novel in him, another might have none at all -- and still a third might write nothing but. The key, I think, is to do whatever we feel called to do as well as we can do it, and to make allowances for the fact that others pursue a different vision. Not that I find this easy. If I don't keep reminding myself to make allowances, I end up wanting the world to do things my way. Then I remember what a sad little world it would be, and I'm grateful for all the work being done that I'd never have countenanced in its conception, but am moved by once it's complete.

October 10, 2007

Thoughts on This Week's Dialogue

I'd like to thank everyone who dropped by this week for my dialogue with Becky Miller, and welcome anyone with a perspective to share to jump right in. After all this talk, I'd like to offer some thoughts of my own about the so-called "problem" of Christian fiction. I'm no expert -- just an imperfect observer -- but the conversation this week has brought some issues into focus for me. In no particular order:

(1) Things are getting better. A few years ago, I sensed a lot of defensiveness about the state of craft in evangelical fiction, but that seems to be disappearing. This is now something we can talk about openly without being accused of disloyalty, etc., and that's a testament to people's confidence in the rising quality of the writing. In the comments, I cited Athol Dickson's conclusion, in an Infuze interview, that evangelical fiction today is no better, no worse than any other genre. This rings true to me. Generally speaking, there's room for improvement, but that's the case on every shelf in the bookstore.

Continue reading "Thoughts on This Week's Dialogue" »

October 04, 2007

You Can't Always Change the World

Img_0005I sometimes worry I've taken myself too seriously. Writing fiction is a playful pursuit, even when the subject matter is weighty. After all, it's about imagining, it's about making things up. You need a supple mind and a willingness to make unlikely connections. It's about more than just the successful application of theory. Nurturing the critical faculties is one way to build up artists, but there's a frequent side-effect: work-in-progress tends to be measured against the best work of the best writers. We have to keep asking ourselves, Is this great?

The difficulty is compounded when you happen to see yourself as part of a community that needs to represent itself better in the arts. Christian art these days has a sorry reputation, and since I'm both an artist and a Christian, I would rather punch holes in that perception than reinforce it. Problem is, if I go to the keyboard every day trying to roll that particular stone up the hill, all the suppleness departs from my work. I become just another crusading novelist, even though I'm crusading against crusades.

Continue reading "You Can't Always Change the World" »

September 28, 2007

Write About Now ... And Not a Moment Too Soon

Welcome to Write About Now. I'm J. Mark Bertrand, and this is my new blog about writing and publishing. Since 2005, I've been writing about craft in fiction at a blog called, unimaginatively enough, Notes on Craft, but here I'm opening the topic up to include more than craft. What you need to know about me: I write non-fiction, but my real love is fiction ... and I'm an editor, too. Thanks to my MFA in Creative Writing, I have literary ambitions, but these days what I'm really interested in is crime fiction. Read as much as you like, push back and let me know what you think. With no further ado, here goes ...

September 06, 2007

Sponges and Conduits

Every author has his influences. Originality is a relative term. When we're asked where our ideas come from, an honest answer might be: "From other writers." Good authors borrow, great authors steal, and all that. Still, there's a right way and a wrong way to go about it. The author's mind is often compared to a sponge -- it's always soaking up ideas. I'm going to suggest that some authors behave as sponges, which is good, and others act like conduits, which is bad.

The sponge accumulates influences and gives them time to reconfigure in his mind. He takes what others have done but repurposes it in keeping with his own vision. When you read his work, you can probably identify some influences, but you aren't left thinking, "Hey, I've encountered this story before!"

The conduit is less artful, more derivative. He plunders whatever is popular and cranks out his thinly disguised version of it. In some cases, the process is so brazen that readers (or the author himself) can make one-to-one identifications. If you want to know the difference, it's that sponges are influenced while conduits merely imitate. There are some very successful conduits out there, writers who take every trend and crank out their own version of it, but I think there's something ultimately unsatisfying about such work. It's not just originality that's absent, but in some mysterious way personality seems missing, too.

May 14, 2007

Is the Learning Curve Really So Steep?

It takes years for a novelist to learn his craft. That's the conventional wisdom. For me, it has proven accurate. I have learned my lessons slowly, and have also had a tendency to forget them over time. My guess is that, for many of the people who teach writing, the same thing could be said. The best teachers are often people who have struggled with the subject, because their own problems equip them to help with the roadblocks of others. I've met very talented writers, people for whom it all came easily, who were not very good at teaching for precisely this reason. They did what they did without thinking. In the same way that the writer who struggles for years in obscurity before landing a publishing deal has much more advice on the subject than the one who finished his first draft, e-mailed it to the agent, and had it accepted by the first editor to have a look. The longer it takes to get there, the more you learn on the way.

Continue reading "Is the Learning Curve Really So Steep?" »

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