Saturday, October 31, 2009
Monday, October 19, 2009
Audition by Michael Shurtleff - Discoveries
Discoveries
To keep engaging readers in a story, authors must fill each scene with discoveries, things that happen for the first time. Discoveries may revolve around the protagonist, another character in the scene, or someone who is offstage.
Don’t let your discoveries be limited by time. They may be about the situation now or the situation as it existed ten years ago and how they affect the now. The more discoveries authors create in a scene, the more interesting the scene will be. Take nothing for granted. Readers are sucked into stories by emotions, so make an emotional discovery as often as you can find one in each scene. To build upon this emotion, let one character supply the opposite to this emotion, even if he or she is not seen in the scene (subtext).