Love. Passion. Excitement. Drama. Engagement. These are things which can turn your writing from a collection of words into a Story! Make it something you loved writing and are proud of to something which people will love reading and want more of. Of course we are writing for ourselves and writing a style we love but we do want it to sell right? We want to see our vision on the Silver Screen or the TV at least. We don't write it to leave in a drawer somewhere to desintegrate do we? No, Alan we do not, we would love ot achieve success with it and have lots of people read and love it like we do!
You have many ways to create these but here are a couple;
Fight or pursuit scenes. How can you use style, skill and language to create tension, draw them in and make them want to know how your scene ends. How can you create that 'edge of the seat' feeling?
Tension Building Scenes; when you and the reader have a good idea what is going to happen but you 'lead them down the garden path' in a way where they are no longer sure or don't know HOW it is going to happen.
Death Scenes; If you have not built up a character as interesting and complete, will they care if that character dies? Can you build your scene so that, at least, a tear is shed and a heart flutters? Can you, through your passion and love cause them to feel it?
Conflict Scenes; When two or more protagonists hold vastly or only slight variations of viewpoint and that difference is either a point of conflict or pivotal part of story. Here, dialogue will likely be your friend, internal dialogue also, perhaps.
This is the hardest part that, I believe, no-one can teach because you have to feel it, you have to present it and give them a reason to engage, to emote and to be pulled into the narrative. Today I will be doing things a little differently than I have, with a reading from a key scene in my ultra-secret collaborative project. A scene entitled "The Fall of Atlantis." This is an example of a tension and a sort of death scene. It involves sympathy, perhaps, for someone who should really deserve none. It involves a twist of perception and an idea turned on it's head. The idea of a sympathetic villain and why he chose to act as he did; how he got so angry and twisted up and who he had around as his only allies left to influence him. He's effectivelty the First Villain too...
How can you do this in your writing? More news and reveals on this exciting project to come but look into the style and my perhaps slightly rusty delivery and acting skills. (Alan's acting skills could perhaps use some work but he's trying! He has no plans to become an actual actor so don't worry..he shall not inflict singing on you next so relax) coming soon. Get ready for some huge changes to the website and also to existing books with the dawn of this new year. I have some very exciting and unexpected big changes coming.
The text I was reading can be found HERE for those of your who would like to follow along. I made a couple of corrects and changes as I went along; hence my occasional long pauses. This is a DRAFT not a final one either so there are errors in it. That's why my project remains TOP SECRET because I am far from having it in presentable form. This is a hint and only here for illustrative purposes. No critique of spelling or word choices please (or observations of me diverging from the text, it is MY text so I can!) as this is a firmly WIP. Enjoy anyway if you like.
The essence is true and measurable emotion and we will talk about that in the attached video. How can your words make others feel and how can you make your story huge. By appealing to people's feelings.
Darkness Within: Sable's Journey (working title) is coming soon. Get ready!
Also Happy New Year 2018 to you all!
Comments