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Famous Writers School [Paperback]

Steven Carter
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Product details

  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Old Street Publishing; New edition edition (17 April 2007)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1905847106
  • ISBN-13: 978-1905847105
  • Product Dimensions: 19.4 x 12.8 x 2.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 2.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,293,265 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Steven Carter
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"Madly inventive"

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"Darkly comic"

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2.0 out of 5 stars I had high hopes..., 14 Nov 2011
This review is from: Famous Writers School (Paperback)
Review first published in The Small Press Review. A free copy was sent to me (the editor) for review. I have had no personal contact with the author or publisher.

It is a truth universally acknowledged among teachers of creative writing that stories about writers do not get accepted for publication. To mention that your protagonist is a writer will bring frowns of disapproval; the rationale being that any writer that produces such a story is simply writing about themselves. Examining this prejudice more closely, with reference to another suggestion from the tutor - write about what you know - and you can see why beginner writers become confused. Look further, at how many books have writers (or thinly disguised ones) as a central character, and you begin to regard the majority of writing advice with a good deal of suspicion. Why shouldn't you write about a writer? What should matter is not what you choose to write about, but how well you write it. But agents, publishers and critics are obsessed with the idea that an author must have some kind of sanction to choose a subject. If they have worked in a health related field, then they can write about a surgeon. If they have travelled in Columbia, then they can tell the story of a street child. If they are gay, then they can create a character who explores the gay underworld of some American city. If, however, your choice of subject is made for no better reason than that it interested you, you're in trouble. How will we market her? What's his unique selling point? Steven Carter gets around this problem by being a teacher of creative writing who has written a novel about creative writing. If you're now confused, then join the club.

And so to The Famous Writers School. A man who may or may not be a successful writer advertises for students for a distance-learning course:

Through a series of carefully structured lessons you'll receive instruction in all aspects of storytelling, and you'll receive thoughtful feedback on your work...

Three would-be students reply (we're told later that there are seventeen, but the novel centres on this trio and their postal tutor, Wendell Newton) and give the written equivalent of that cringing moment when you have to stand up in front of a new class and `say something about yourself'. Dan is a new but competent, commonsense writer who knows what he wants. Rio is the writing tutor's nightmare; the student who has `so many ideas she doesn't know which one to choose', all of them clearly autobiographical. Does this woman want to create fiction or simply tell her own story repeatedly to a captive audience? Linda has one story, probably also autobiographical, but tells it with verve and a degree of humour.

Via a series of letters and work assignments the students orbit their teacher, who, through his method of teaching them with examples from his own life, begins to exhibit worrying behaviour:

She was silent. Seconds ticked like hammers to the forehead. I was making a fist with my free hand. I couldn't think of anything to say. Finally I said, `I noticed your car has out-of-state plates. I thought maybe--'
`How do you know that?' she said.
`I just happened to see it at the grocery,' I said.
`Oh. Well, all right. But how did you get my name?'
I hadn't considered the possibility of that coming up. I couldn't tell her the truth, though, which was that I followed her home from work one rainy day, watched her check her mail and go into her apartment, and then got soaked as I ran to the mail box, got her name and ran back to the car.

Much of this story is very entertaining. The crime novel which Dan sends piecemeal to the tutor is clearly better than anything Wendell could write.

However, the two female students and the fictional women in Dan's novel are ciphers whose main role seems to be to have, to have had, or at some point in the future to be willing to have sex with one of the men. In Dan's story in particular they offer themselves up with such alacrity and so little motivation, that Wendell's suggestion that he include more sex adds a layer of irony that feels unintentional. The book as a whole is also unbalanced by the large sections of Dan's `work', which overwhelms that of the other characters. It leaves the reader feeling that this started life as an unsaleable crime novel, which was then reused in a new form. A slower revealing of the characters of the four writers, some attempt to subvert the expectations of the reader and greater development of the wider story are needed to turn a good idea into a great book.
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2.0 out of 5 stars A great idea but petered out towards the end, 13 Feb 2011
By 
This review is from: Famous Writers School (Paperback)
Wendell Newton is the tutor on his own creative writing correspondence course and the novel is made up of the assignments he sets his newest set of students and the exercises they return to him as part of the course. Through their brief correspondence and the questionable critiques Wendell sends back we get to know both him and his students.

In this way, we learn that while Wendell is content to pick apart his students' work, he has no qualms about lifting a stand-out phrase from it and re-using as his own. It seems to be the perfect con trick until we begin to suspect that one student might know more about the real Wendell than he realises...

People are rarely who they seem to be in this novel and there is often a gap between the image the characters hope to portray of themselves and the one their words/actions convey. Carver manages to build up a convincing image of each of the characters and their individual voices come across clearly. The student responses allow the author to explore different genres with the most talented of the students providing one of the threads running through the novel with the opening chapters of his tense, double-crossing thriller. This novel within a novel works well here as it provides a clear narrative for the reader to follow. In some ways it reminded me of Calvino's 'If on a Winter's Night a Traveller.'

Ultimately though, I felt disappointed when I reached the end of the novel. For me, the final resolution of Wendell's interwoven personal and professional life wasn't particularly satisfying and I would have liked this fleshed out in more detail. After all this storyline had been building up throughout the novel and so when it ends as it does it all just felt a little flat.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.5 out of 5 stars (15 customer reviews)

7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Something Completely Different, 11 Mar 2007
By Kevin Joseph - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Famous Writers School: A Novel (Hardcover)
I picked up this book on a whim while browsing the new arrivals section at my local library. It had an unusual cover and a premise that intrigued me. Fortunately that was enough to make me take a chance on this unusual novel.

Wendell Newton runs a writing correspondence course. The novel is comprised entirely of the lessons Newton mails to his current crop of three students and the writing samples they mail back for his critique. The three students make colorful characters in their own right (a PhD flunkie/lounge singer, a desperate housewife/stalker, and a tractor salesman seeking editorial feedback on an offbeat mystery novel).

As the lessons progress, we learn that Newton is more charlatan than artist, dispensing half-baked writing advice while looking for angles to take advantage of his students. We also become engrossed by the tractor salesman's novel within the novel (entitled "Undress, My Lovely" if the cover art is to be believed), a bizarre caper written in a hard-boiled style and populated by small-town crooks and two-bit losers. And we're entertained by the tension between the tractor salesman's vision of suspenseful, plot-driven genre fiction and the instructor's preachings that good writing must be subtle and plotless, as well as devoid of blood-pumping action or sex.

I won't say more about how the instructor and his students' lives ultimately intersect. But I will say that this book offers a unique combination of suspenseful entertainment, interesting musings on what makes good (and bad) writing, and thoughtful riffs on how the art a writer creates is inevitably derived from what the writer has experienced or read elsewhere. If only some of this novel's loose threads had been tied together with a bit more care, I wouldn't have bumped this from five stars down to four.

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars At the feet of Wendell Newton, 20 Nov 2006
By Lawrentius Verifer "widely-read reader" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Famous Writers School: A Novel (Hardcover)
When one buys this novel one not only gets a great read but also gets to absorb the lessons that Wendell Newton (who describes himself as a "widely published fiction writer") sends to his subscribers. The quality of Wendell's students varies widely, but Dan Federman's work seems to rival that of the "widely published fiction writer" who is his teacher. In fact, as Dan submits succeeding chapters his teacher becomes more and more interested in fostering his work.
Not that Wendell can spend all his time on Dan. Wendell's postal relations with his students quickly become complex, and then events begin to leave the page and intrude into Wendell's own daily life. Formerly disembodied voices become all too real.
Steven Carter leads his readers deeper and deeper into his story by encouraging Wendell's students to speak candidly with their teacher, though their honesty becomes increasingly problematic. Indeed, Steven Carter demonstrates the possibility that teaching and learning can become a complex process of mutual manipulation between teacher and students.
Like one does with any good novel, one will read and reread it to trace the knots that are expertly tied by the author. Rereadings will also seek to parse the character of Wendell himself, who as the chief (and only) officer of Famous Writers School encounters many of the temptations that beseige other entrepreneurs in these (ethically-challenged?) times.
Whatever you do, don't miss the opportunity to amuse yourself with the ultimate irony expressed by the clever contruction of the front of the book's dust jacket.
In *Famous Writer's School* Steven Carter amply demonstrates why he himself is a widely published author!

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Truly Original, 19 Nov 2006
By David Phalen - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Famous Writers School: A Novel (Hardcover)
Of all the occupational hazards that we frequent readers find ourselves up against on a daily basis, the most serious has to be the curse of knowing too much. Having seen just about everything worth doing done by someone in the past, it becomes all too easy to start pigeon-holing what we're currently reading into the context of something that some other writer has already written (often better). We tend to hold back on descriptive words like "fresh" and "original" because the more we read, the more difficult it becomes to honestly say that what we're reading is completely unlike anything we've ever read in the past.

That's why it's always a great joy to come across a book like FAMOUS WRITERS SCHOOL. As other reviewers have noted, it's not hard to find some parallels between this novel and the works of others (along with Beckett, Nabokov, and Carver, I'd add folks like Mark Harris and Margaret Maron). But it's impossible to point to any of these writers (or any others that this book has reminded people of) and honestly say, "This book is a lot like...." Because this novel is NOT "a lot" like anything that anybody has ever done before. It certainly contains tiny riffs of folks like Dashiell Hammett in places, while echoes of Flannery O'Connor can be heard at other times. But it's not these "influences" that make this book such an enjoyable read. They merely serve as a sort of familiar grounding for us until we realize that what we're really holding in our hands is that holy grail we seek every time we pick up a new novel: a fresh, original work that expands our sense of what is possible in fiction.

Having spent so much time comparing this work to the work of others, I would be remiss if I neglected to point out what I find most incredible about THIS author's work. What Carter does best, it seems to me, is create two layers for each of his main characters. There is the self-idealized "public" persona that people project (both consciously and unconsciously) in their interactions with others, and there is the often less-assured "real" self that indirectly comes across through a gradual accrual of details that they let slip into those public interactions. The true joy of this novel for me was in finding those hints (some very obvious and humorous, but others almost heart-breakingly subtle) of what really makes the four main characters tick. None of them are as simple and direct as they might seem if looked at only through how they present themselves through the letters and writing assignments they send back and forth to each other.

I found myself thinking of this novel the other day while watching an episode of "The Office" on television. The moments I like best on that show are the ones where the characters realize that others (particularly the cameras there filming the documentary) might not be seeing them as they want to be seen. FAMOUS WRITERS SCHOOL is full of moments like that: moments that made me laugh out loud, because if I didn't laugh, I might feel like crying in sympathy for how much these people are just like me.
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