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Don't Kill Your Darlings

save them for a soggy story

By Marie WilsonPublished 6 months ago Updated 6 months ago 3 min read
photo by MW

Often attributed to William Faulkner, the phrase "kill your darlings" actually began its life when Sir Arthur Quiller-Couch wrote "murder your darlings" in his 1916 book, On the Art of Writing.

Regardless of who said it, it means get rid of the dross, trim the fat - if it doesn't move your story forward, scrap it. No matter how clever or lovely you think your similies, alliterations and what-have-yous are, if they don't serve the story, they're in the way.

But - I don't kill my darlings.

If they aren't working for that particular story I stash them away for another time. Like a sentence/paragraph/novella bank, these bits are saved up for a rainy day or for a story that appears to be all wet.

photo: MW

I write screenplays. Sometimes, especially if the script is not working, I give up on the screen part of it and focus on the play (the verb not the noun). This means writing prose - free-style maybe, stream-of-consciousness possibly - with no vision of how the work will translate to another medium, no pressure to do anything but tell the story with words; paint a picture, sure, but no movie projection in my head starring Clark Gable or Thelma Ritter - I jest, that's not my usual screenwriting practice, but you get the idea: let the poodles off the leash, as someone once said.

The following is a scene that got cut from a recent script-in-progress. Something about it speaks to me. It pleads: "Don't let me die. I have a purpose to fulfill."

By Anne Roston on Unsplash

So here it is, half short story, half screenplay, just one scene featuring a character named Gwen (*who made it into a story linked at the end here):

Gwen spent the evening creating a leaflet, just a few basic facts. And some scientific answers to questions she always got asked: Isn't your child just gay? Has your kid had the surgery? Isn't it just a phase? Will your child get the surgery? What kind of a life will your kiddo have under these circumstances? And what about the surgery?

Gwen stood on a corner near the town square to hand the flyers out. Her friend, Langston, accompanied her and sat on a nearby bench softly playing his guitar. Soon, their neighbour, Dora, came by. She smiled at Gwen and Langston and accepted a leaflet.

Giving it a little speed-read, Dora waved it about and laughed. “Ha! I’m seventy-four years old and I have no opinion about pronouns and all that stuff. I leave it to the youngsters!”

“That’s amazing, Dora. Most people have way too many opinions.”

By Markus Winkler on Unsplash

“Well, I guess I’m with whats-er-name...you know, that lady who wrote Harry Potter.”

“What? You just said you have no opinion…”

“Well, I…”

“Oh. You meant no opinions of your own. Some uber famous billionaire writer barks out some not-twitter tweet and that’s good enough for you?”

“We all have a right to our opinion, Gwen. All that Harry Potter lady said was…”

“Oh, I know what she said. And it wasn’t all she said. That Harry Potter lady has got opinions up her Hufflepuff.”

“Her what?”

"Hufflepuff..." Langston sang, to a few plucked notes on his guitar.

“You know, Dora," Gwen said, "I’ve discovered that people tend to build walls around themselves with their opinions. And then you can’t get through to them at all."

Dora was interested but mystified. Langston strummed a soft soundtrack for her confusion.

"It’s like the three little pigs,” Gwen continued.

“It is?”

By Kameron Kincade on Unsplash

“Only even the big bad wolf can’t blow this particular house down because it’s made of opinionate. Not straw, not bricks, but opinionate.”

“Opinionate?” Dora said, her brow crinkling.

“Yeah. It’s like laminate, only it’s opinionate. And the only huffing and puffing that goes on is from the inside."

"Hufflepuff huff and puff,” Langston sang.

“There’s no such word as opinionate,” Dora said, ignoring the minstrel.

“That’s your opinion,” Gwen countered.

“And I am entitled…”

“Yeah, yeah. I know.”

Tom Morales on Unsplash

Thanks for reading! Author's note: Gwen and I both care and do not care about others' opinions. We care when people (especially high profile people) state their opinions as truth and then spread that pseudo truth to hurt other people.

Teach us to care and not to care/Teach us to sit still/Even among these rocks - T.S. Eliot, Ash Wednesday

*Gwen can be found here -

Process

About the Creator

Marie Wilson

Harper Collins published my novel "The Gorgeous Girls". My feature film screenplay "Sideshow Bandit" has won several awards at film festivals. I have a new feature film screenplay called "A Girl Like I" and it's looking for a producer.

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Outstanding

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Comments (5)

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  • Lightning Bolt ⚡5 months ago

    I enjoyed every aspect of this! I'm long-winded as hell when I write. Not only do I fail to kill my darlings, I have sometimes given them center stage repeatedly to say too much and do nothing. Vocal has been great for me because I recognized the audience here is largely attracted to shorter pieces than longer ones, and that caused brevity to be my overriding goal at times, especially for challenges! There was that 'Love Letters Through Time' challenge last year and I started writing a story set in Chicago in 1929. I studied the slang of the 20s for days before I wrote my story. When I was finally done finishing the first draft, it was like 1000 words over the limit. So then I worked for 2 days, right up to the deadline trimming and cutting and editing. Then, when it lost the challenge, I put a lot of those trimmed details back into the story and republished it here. 😅 I totally agree with saving our darlings for another day as opposed to outright murdering them!  And scenes are like puzzle pieces to me at times.  I'll write a scene and then realize it has more impact in a different place in the story and shuffle things around, which sometimes means an idea/scene gets eliminated, and then that goes onto a shelf for another day. ___ I'd love to talk to you in depth sometime about screenplay writing!!! I've never done it, and only recently, as my stories focus more and more on dialogue-- I've developed a hunger to try!   I have a really cool premise, I think.  I'm slowly developing characters.  And I'm also studying the same genre I'm writing, watching movies and series not just for entertainment but to study them. It's always a pleasure interacting with you. Bill⚡

  • Akhtar Gul6 months ago

    Really inspiring

  • Rachel Deeming6 months ago

    I love Langston strumming in the background. There was something of the fool about him. I let phrases go. I feel like they're just milling around in the waiting room of my brain and will pester the desk when needed. Ideas though get stored - if I've gone off on a tangent and edit it out afterwards, I will place it somewhere and know it will have its day.

  • I know that there was a huge controversy about J K Rowling but I don't know what it was about. May I know what did she say?

  • Rachel Robbins6 months ago

    I love this. That’s a great scene. And I don’t kill my darlings either. Weirdly I have an excel spreadsheet with sentences and phrases I like but can’t quite place, yet.

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