By Harry Kraus
Jogging down a dusty road
under the African equatorial sun, I started thinking about thirst, one
of the most powerful of human urges. Once dehydration becomes
pronounced, the brain sends out a constant message that takes priority over
everything else: DRINK! Hmmm. Perhaps thirst can teach me something about
making readers desire to turn pages. OK,maybe it was the heat, or my
own dehydration, but I began to imagine my readers thirsting, and me
holding out the promise of water.
Why should my readers thirst
to turn pages? How can I intensify their thirst?
Turn up the heat. When I run
in the middle of the day, the noonday
sun makes me sweat,
increasing my dehydration and thus, my thirst.
When I write, I strive to
increase the stakes. Make
the unfortunate and unexpected turn of
events matter. As you write,
ask yourself “Why does this matter”? OK,
your protagonist lost his
car keys, so what? Make it matter: His wife
is in labor and there is no
other transportation.
Feed them salt. The messages
sent out to prod us to drink are
dependent on the
concentration of sodium in the blood. When we give
our readers salt, their
thirst to turn pages will increase. How? Make
them care about your
protagonist. While your main character needs to
be flawed, and may have some
characteristics that are disagreeable, he
or she needs to have enough
strength to be able to recognize and face
their own character flaws.
This makes readers identify with them and
that emotional bond will
help build empathy when you are turning up
the heat.
Hide the water. Nothing
creates thirst more than a question or
mystery that goes
unanswered. Hint that water is around the corner,
but when the reader gets
there, have the jug be empty or the water be
contaminated!
Give wrong directions to the
water. When writing a mystery, it is
important to make the
outcome a surprise. It needs to make sense
(subtle clues along the way
that the reader can look back on and
realize that the outcome is
reasonable), but it needs to be an
unexpected outcome. This is
done by planting misdirection along the
path.
Delay the water source. If I’m thirsty by the time I get back to my home in
is brown!), my thirst is
only accentuated. Find something that your reader wants to know
(outcome of a conflict, the resolution of a problem etc) and delay the
resolution. Or, if you solve one problem,
create two more in the
process!
In the end, give them what
they want! The resolution of theprotagonist’s conflict
should be as refreshing and satisfying to yourreaders as a cold drink
after a long run! I thought I’d never get here. I went the wrong way
trying to find the stream! I couldn’t find the water. I shouldn’t have
eaten those potato chips!
Make your readers thirsty.
Then give them a cool reward. Then certainly they will come
back asking for more.
_____________________________________________________________
Harry Kraus, M.D. is a board-certified surgeon, medical missionary to East Africa, and accomplished writer of both non-fiction and fiction. Medical realism and gripping plotlines distinguish his writing, as he gets most of his ideas with a scalpel in hand. His books include; A Heartbeat Away, Perfect, and The Six-Liter Club. Dr. Kraus resides in Kenya with his wife Kris and the youngest of his three sons. His most recent book release is
Domesticated Jesus.
His website http://www.harrykraus.com/index.html
His blog (love the title) http://3menwalkintoablog.com/
Domesticated Jesus.
His website http://www.harrykraus.com/index.html
His blog (love the title) http://3menwalkintoablog.com/
No comments:
Post a Comment