Regarding her writing process, Brock described how her stories end up with dual timelines and why she tells them from multiple points of views. “…typically, I think for a long time… I usually know the place, and once I have a person in mind and I start to have a voice to that person… I will then know the end for the story… So I’ll write the end scene, and it’ll shift and change through drafts to some degree, but mostly it holds up… and then I know where my story starts… I think, ‘Ok, I’m going to have three characters, one main point of view, some secondary characters in this straight line,’ and then I start to write, and what happens inevitably is it will split into a dual timeline and the reason it does this… is because this is how I learned to tell a story… I have to know where [the characters] came from, who they were, why they’re where they’re at… so I will inevitably have this event that happens in the past, and then my secondary characters, sometimes I just like them too much for them to just be a secondary character. They’re giving me more information about the question that I have.”
And when you grow up where I grew up, this is how your story goes: you start out telling the story, and then you say, ‘But, you remember when…”
Folklore is the boiled down juice or potlicker of human living.”
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Subscribe: RSS
Want to join the discussion?
Feel free to contribute!