Although I owe a lot to Ayn Rand's ideas, I'm not interested in glorifying her. And I've wearied of reading related material, because much of it is uncritical, or worse -- just more titillating (to someone, apparently) natterings about her Inner Circle and excommunications therefrom. It might have been unfair of me to suspect such material would be lurking in the pages of Ayn Rand: My Fiction-Writing Teacher, but other books have wandered off their purported focus and into those thickets. Refreshingly, Holzer did not. She not only stayed on the subject, thus providing an excellent overview of the craft of fiction writing, but she created a three-dimensional portrayal of Rand. Delightfully absent are the clichés of flashing eyes, gathering stormclouds, and absolutist pronouncements; instead the reader is treated to genuine exchanges of ideas between Rand and Holzer. Given the focus of the book on a process -- creating good fiction -- rather than Rand herself, it shouldn't come as a surprise that Holzer achieves such a rich depiction.
Not having seriously tried my hand at fiction, nor likely to do so anytime soon, I nonetheless found Holzer's treatment of the process fascinating. She doesn't glibly state that anyone can create good fiction; however, Holzer does assert that much of the craft can be learned, and offers much to back that claim. In several places I became so intrigued that I was tempted to set some writing exercises for myself. And I'm sure I'm not the only reader to find irony in discovering a chapter titled Flexibility.
Through her willingness to recreate the learning process she went through with Rand as well as her sharing of excerpts of her writing, Holzer vivifies the process of fiction writing. But that's not to suggest that Holzer airily dismisses the challenges inherent in the process; all along the way, she identifies traps that an author can fall into and never climb out of. Nor does her method necessarily doom works to formulaic blandness. Rather, Holzer distills the process to fundamentals, and offers advice gleaned by years of experience.
In Ayn Rand: My Fiction-Writing Teacher, Erika Holzer has accomplished something remarkable: she reaches beyond the mythic figure, beyond the intellectual accomplishments and oft-emphasized human failings, and creates a well-rounded, believable portrayal of Ayn Rand. She also creates a loose how-to that itself reads like an adventure. Any prose writer will find helpful information here; likewise, anyone interested in Rand will enjoy the peek behind the monolithic façade so often encountered.