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Book reviews for "Kercheval,_Jesse_Lee" sorted by average review score:

Space: A Memoir
Published in Paperback by Berkley Pub Group (1999)
Author: Jesse Lee Kercheval
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Reading this book is like being there.
Reading this book is just like being there. I am nearly the same age as Jesse Kercheval is and I loved her detail of the space center area. Our family vacations there occasionally. The stories in the book of her growing up were fascinating, and I found I could'nt put the book down, that's rare for me, and I read a lot. When an event such as a space launch took place that she wrote about I thought to myself that I was doing this or that, and where. It was great to get the perspective of a girl growing up in a time and place that will never happen again, and very humorous also, I laughed and laughed at times. Jesse, thanks for this treasure.

An absorbing, fast read
I found this book to be a captivating, honest look at coming of age in a family that is coming apart. Jesse and her sister are forced to grow up far beyond their years in order to attempt to hold their family together against the backdrop of the United States' race for space exploration. The author's descriptions of the various friends, pets, and neighbors who live and work within her Florida neighborhood are priceless. I finished it in two nights!

One of the greatest books you will ever read!
My mom first brought me this book and when I saw the title and cover I thought to myself "this is going to be one the most dull books I will ever read ! But then, of course ,I started reading it and I could not stop. It was one of the best and interesting book I have ever read. in this book they talk about all the space missions but there is more to it than that! It also talks about a girls life from the time she was a little girl till she is an adult ! If you like biographies then you will just adore this book!


Building Fiction: How to Develop Plot & Structure
Published in Paperback by Story Pr (1997)
Author: Jesse Lee Kercheval
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An egocentric catastrophy.
"she builds a work of fiction just as an architect would design a house"

they say... Don't believe them. This book is, at best, a collection of commented snippets, at worst an unstructured mess. It is neither a book about plot development nor a book about character construction. In fact, once you put this thing down, you'll realize that you have learned much more about what the author thinks of herself, her writing and the way others look at it than about the writing process in general. Building blocks ? Sure. Some real pearls of wisdom (among many):

"The beginning of a story deserves special care and attention because it introduces readers to everything that follows" (p20)

"Simply put, a minor character gets less space in print that the others. A central character gets more" (p76)

"Fiction, no matter what its architecture, is built with words." (p182)

You'll discover many other truly amazing facts : for example that writing like Hemingway takes special skills but can be done (p28), that pet rocks don't make great point-of-view characters (p35), that if you look only at the smaller issues, you risk not seeing the forest for the trees (p134). The list could go on forever... If you make it to page 40 or so, your only motivation to proceed might be to hunt the next hilariously useless piece of advice.

It is clear however that the author can write : on page 78 for example, she drops a very astute indirect suggestion that sex could be one of the ingredients that powers her previous book. Guess you'll have to buy that one if you want to check.

To be honest, I am forced to admit that there are a few useful hints in this otherwise narcissic desert - barely enough to justify 2 stars.

Accidental ?

Excellent ideas for beginning & intermediate writers.
Over the course of the 7 years I've been writing novel-length fiction, I've read dozens of how-to books. Frequently I've found those written by authors of "lit fic," such as Kercheval, to not be very useful to a writer of commercial, popular fiction. But Kercheval is a happy exception to this rule. I found her book clear and often very insightful on almost every aspect of the novel. Since discussing everything I liked would take too much space and time, I will limit myself to describing the aspect I found most valuable, Kercheval's discussion of conflict.

I particularly liked what Kercheval has to say about "interior dialogue," aka "introspection," or what I often banefully call "musing." She talks about it as the strongest source of revealing internal conflict ("man against himself"), while action is the area in which external conflict ("man against man," "man against nature") is displayed. Of course many people have written about conflict before, but I think Kercheval's unique contribution is the very clear way she explains how one can visualize the resolution of the internal and external conflict. To wit: that the external crisis in a novel cannot be resolved until after the internal crisis is resolved.

I liked her statement in this regard that the internal crisis is the moment the protagonist decides to take the action which can potentially resolve the external conflict. This was, to me, a very thought-provoking way of describing what is traditionally known as the "come to realize" moment which follows the "black moment" of a novel. She suggests that often this moment of internal insight involves the protagonist ceasing to be stuck in the belief that people (including him/herself) can't change. Once the protagonist realizes that he/she *can* change, this permits the growth that allows the character to reframe his/her thinking so as to allow new possibilities for action to occur. The action, as mentioned above, which leads to the resolution of the external conflict.

Finally, I found Kercheval's explanation of the internal conflict techniques of flashbacks, dreams and visions quite useful. In particular, I hadn't thought of the use of visions as a useful technique in popular fiction before, and her analysis of it gave me new food for thought.

A Perfect Guide for New Writers
Jesse Kercheval has written a book to help novice writers gain a foothold and begin crafting the sort of fiction that will keep readers turning pages. This book is like a self-contained writing course--examining basics like opening hooks, point of view, conflict, and characterization with a clear, readable style.

Building Fiction probably doesn't offer much by way of new advice for anyone beyond the rank of beginner, but if you're ready to explore writing and publication, it offers an excellent starting point. I'll be using it as a text for beginning writing classes in the future.


World as Dictionary (Carnegie Mellon Poetry Series)
Published in Paperback by Carnegie Mellon University (1999)
Author: Jesse Lee Kercheval
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'fess up
Oh, come now, Sam. You ARE the author of this book. Relax. Even Homer nodded.


Building Fiction: How to Develop Plot and Structure
Published in Paperback by Univ of Wisconsin Pr (24 March, 2003)
Author: Jesse Lee Kercheval
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The Dogeater
Published in Paperback by University of Missouri Press (1987)
Author: Jesse Lee Kercheval
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The Museum of Happiness: A Novel
Published in Hardcover by Faber & Faber (1993)
Author: Jesse Lee Kercheval
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