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Madeline HunterOur guest author, Madeline Hunter, ponders the imponderable – reader interpretations vs. writer intent.  Read on… 

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This post is supposed to be about readers and reading, and it is. Only it is not about my toppling TBR pile. Instead I want to talk about how readers actually form and control the books they read.

Actually, I think that readers finish writing the books they read. Let me explain.

I received a nice amount of reader emails when my first book was published. Like any writer I was elated that someone had actually read the story that up until then had only existed in the minds of me, my agent, my editor and my best friend. Upon reading some of the emails, however, I began to wonder if all of these new fans really had read the story I had written.

The first eyebrow went up when a couple of them compared my book to those by a writer whom I admire, but that I don’t think my work resembles at all. Yet here were some readers gushing on how similar our books were.

appleoranges.jpgThen I received some letters asking me to explain something in the plot that I thought was very clear. As in hit-you-over-the-head clear.

I received a lot of feedback about the historical detailing. I found this interesting because in order to carve that book down to something resembling a publisher’s word count, I had stripped out most of the detailing.

There were also readers who really fixated on some minor character. That walk-on with five lines somehow had become the reader’s best friend.

I chewed all this over. I continued getting emails like this with my following books. Reviews really could make me pause too. The question that would pop into mind with this feedback was “Did she read the book I wrote?”

I have concluded that the answer is “Probably not.”

mindmeld.JPGOh, they all read the words I had written. But reading is a creative process. Two minds are making that story. As a writer, I put down words to try and communicate the story unfolding in my head. The reader’s mind may add or subtract, may react more or less strongly than mine did, or may focus on small things that I barely noticed myself.

I figured out what was going on when I wrote a report at work one day. This committee report was somewhat critical of certain policies and how they were being implemented. When the report circulated, I began getting feedback from various department heads. Every single one had missed the main point of the report, even though it was boldly and baldly stated several times. Instead, to their reading, that report was really about them and their departments.

When we read a novel we are a lot like those department heads. We are not clean slates that the writer gets to chalk up at will, totally controlling our absorption of the story. We all bring our histories and our experiences and our personal baggage with us, and it subconsciously affects how we read every book.

seasponge.JPGFor example, we relate to characters with whom we share some experience or characteristic. We react badly to characters who trigger memories of people we really dislike. If the heroine reminds us of the girl in high school who made our life hell, the story is going to have a hard time engaging us in a positive way. If the reader thinks my hero is like the guy who just dumped her, there is a good chance she will not finish the book. Even a name can affect how a reader relates to a character.

I learned from my readers that reading is not a flat experience. Every word and every sentence does not get absorbed equally, and different minds absorb different things in different ways. Our minds emphasize scenes, words and phrases that interest us for whatever reason and more easily forget ones that don’t.

Of course, sometimes a reader writes to me and her letter indicates she read exactly the book I thought I wrote. That is always nice. Actually it is exciting. Oh my gosh, I think. She totally got it. She didn’t miss anything.

Odd duck outBut sometimes a reader picks up one of my books and reads a story that isn’t nearly as good as the one I wrote.

And sometimes a reader reads one that is better.

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Interesting post, Madeline!  I’ll admit I haven’t thought of this, but I totally see your point!  How about you readers and writers out there?  Ever read a book and think one thing, then go back to it years later and get something totally different out of it?  How about characters – love them one time, hate them the next?