Justin Kramon didn’t think he was qualified to call himself a writer. And then he thought about his favorite books, and had a change of heart:
For some reason, I used to have the perception that writers should be interesting, well-rounded, generally knowledgeable people. I got this idea before I’d met any writers, and certainly before I started trying to become one. In fact, my perception of writers was a big obstacle to writing, because – and I have to be completely honest here – I’m not that interesting, am poorly rounded, and most of what I have to offer in the way of knowledge concerns the time it takes to heat various foods in the microwave.
A few years ago, I’d started working on a novel, but it hadn’t come alive. The voice was wooden and the characters seemed predictable, too polite with each other. It was like watching my novel through a window. I wanted to get in there and tickle everyone.
The problem, I realized, was that I wanted to be a good writer. I wanted to sound like the writers everyone had been telling me were great writers, the best writers, the important writers. A lot of these writers happened to be men, and happened to write in wise, commanding, and slightly formal styles. Reading them made me feel like a slow runner in sixth-grade gym, sweating and hyperventalating while everyone else rushed by. They were doing something I could never do, that I wasn’t built to do.
But these great writers were not actually the writers I most enjoyed reading. Picking up their books was more of a responsibility than a pleasure. The writers I loved, the writers who had meant most to me, who had entertained me and stuck with me and let me lose myself in their books – this was a completely different list.
So one morning, when I couldn’t face my own fledgling novel, I decided to make a list of writers I loved. A writer who immediately jumped to mind was Alice Adams, who died in the late-1990’s and unfairly seems to have fallen off the map. She wrote some of the most entertaining and insightful books I’ve read, including the novel Superior Women and a story collection called To See You Again. I can’t think of many writers I’d rather sit down and read than Alice Adams. Her books are so absorbing that I feel like I’m reading gossip from a close friend, about people I actually know, except the writing is so much funnier and clearer and more beautiful than any gossip I’ve ever read. John Irving is another one. I love his intricate plots, the slightly larger-than-life characters, the comic set pieces, and the sense of bigness and adventure in all his novels. I think of Irving’s books, as I do of Charles Dickens’s, as treasure chests of ideas and characters and funny moments.
Making this list helped me let go a little bit of the desire to be important. I realized that these are the kinds of books I want to write – books filled with unforgettable characters, books that give me an almost childlike sense of wonder. I started a new novel, Finny, with a narrator whose voice is informal, quirky, a little devilish. Finny’s voice made me laugh, and I honestly cared about her and wanted to see what would happen to her, the people she’d meet, the man she would fall in love with.
Part of the process of becoming a writer has been acknowledging my own limitations, the things I don’t know about. And also being honest: about what I like, what I enjoy, what moves me. To be truthful, I don’t enjoy research. I’m not all that interested in history, and even though I try to stay informed, I’m not ardent about politics. I don’t get a huge kick from philosophical or intellectual discussions. I’m interested in psychology, food, loss, sex, death, awkward social situations, and I’m passionate about the subject of why people are as annoying as they are. I may not win a Nobel Prize for this, but it’s the only kind of novel I can write. Making my list, I saw that what I wanted to do was write books that people love reading, that make them laugh and cry, and that allow me to bring a little of myself into the world.
Justin Kramon is the author of the novel Finny (Random House), which was published on Tuesday. Now twenty-nine years old, he lives in Philadelphia. You can find out more about Justin and contact him through his website, www.justinkramon.com. You can watch a book trailer for Finny here, and you can access Justin’s blog for writers here.













See 
LOVE this. Thanks!
Christina, thanks so much for the opportunity to do this guest post. It was fun to be a part of your fantastic blog.
And Pam, I’m so glad that my bumbling was helpful to read about. Thanks so much for your comment. I really appreciate it.
Eventually I guess a writer has to get real about their work, and then it takes off, it seems.
[...] 19, 2010 · Leave a Comment Christina Baker Kline invited me to do a guest post on her blog this week, so I decided to write about something I did [...]
Justin — I loved your posting. Just what the doctor ordered for today, as I sit here, realizing how much NOT like Jhumpa Lahiri (one of my favorites) I am. But then there’s always Alice Adams. Thanks Christina, for posting Justin. See you at Gotham, Justin, one of these days.
thanks for posting this. I feel like I just spent my first year of my MFA trying to write like the writers everyone agrees are great, and failing miserably. I think I’m going to try your exercise, and see what I learn from listing the authors who are personally meaningful to me.
Yeah, it’s a good topic Justin. I think that one of the biggest impediments to my initial drafts of ‘Lethal Inheritance’ was that I was trying to write well. In the end I had to go back and just write. Only then did the voice emerged, my style settled.
I figure that in the end we can only write well like ourselves and that’s all we should aspire to.
[...] Baker Kline: Writing/ Life Great Writing Last week I linked to Justin Kramon’s 2 Concrete Ways To Keep Your Writing Career Moving Forward. [...]
[...] Great Writing: Justin Kramon, author of the recently released novel Finny, writes a guest post on Christina Baker Kline’s blog about feeling discouraged as a writer and what he did to change that. [...]
I just finished FINNY in one sitting and now I fear I am cyber-stalking Justin Kramon…. what an amazing accomplishment… years in the life of this woman and her family real and adopted… I’m in awe.
Thanks for this post and topic. There are so many stories, styles, voices in my head that I think I SHOULD write. These stories include research and history that I’m not that interested in right now. Accepting that will help me move forward and find the story that needs to be written and the voice that it needs to be written in.
I am a 8th grade teacher in NC and came across your site while researching some information about writing techniques for my English class this year. I just wanted to thank you for the great information and articles about writing, and let you know about a site we are putting together to help teachers find trusted resources.
We would love it if you could write a few articles for us, but understand that you are probably busy. I have included a link to the site below in hopes that if you can’t write some resources for us that you can at least link to it, tweet it, or add it to your Facebook profile to help us spread trusted resources throughout the educational community.
http://www.thefreeresource.com
Thanks and keep the great resources coming
Bre Matthews