By Lucy Thompson
I see this repeatedly
when I’m critiquing…
One or two fairly
well-rounded characters wander into a scene, discuss something of mediocre
importance, and then boom have something major happen to them,
and then wander out of the scene.
Huh?
What is the point? What
is the point of that scene? Why is character A there? What is his/her
motivation? His goal? What is the conflict that flows naturally from the
differences between that goal and motivation?
A question I commonly
ask is:
What is the point of
this scene?
All scenes have a reason
for being there. All characters have a reason for stepping into the scene.
From Randy Ingermanson’s
book, How to write a novel using the Snowflake method I learned that a scene is either Proactive orReactive.
(Go buy that book.
Seriously. It’s so helpful and easy to understand!)
PARTS OF A PROACTIVE SCENE:
1. Goal
2. Conflict
3. Setback
———————————————
PARTS OF A REACTIVE SCENE:
1. Reaction
2. Dilemma
3. Decision
Let’s look at PROACTIVE
SCENES.
We’ve got our
characters, now what do they want? What is the goal of this
scene? What does your character wantto happen at the opening of that
chapter or scene? Should start out with at least a hint of what that goal is.
Conflict…What conflict happens to upset that goal? I
mentioned motivation earlier. All characters—and people—are motivated by
something. It could be freedom like in Braveheart, it could be survival like
in Gone With the Wind. What motivation is driving your character to achieve
that goal? In other words, why did they step into that scene? How does this
escalate? How does this complicate the story? How does the lead to the third
part of a proactive scene?
…What is the setback to
that goal? At the end of the scene did the character achieve their
original goal; did they not achieve their goal, or change their
goal? If there’s no change you might need to rethink your scene and possibly
rewrite it.
Moving along to REACTIVE
SCENES. Reactive scenes follow
on/happen after a reactive scene.
Your character first has
a reaction to the setback that happened in the previous
proactive scene.
Out of that reaction
he/she/it then faces a dilemma. Tip: ask yourself what’s the worst
thing that could happen?
Then out of that
dilemma, the character makes a decision.
That decision then
funnels into the next scene (which would be a proactive scene seeing as the
character has a fresh new goal). Rinse and repeat.
I hope this helps. It’s
a common issue I see with beginner manuscripts. There is so much promise hidden
under layers of aimless chapters.
So, go dig your story
out. Give it some purpose, a.k.a a point! And make it shine
___________________________________________________________________________
Lucy Thompson is a
stay-at-home mum to five precocious children by day and a snoop by night,
stalking interesting characters through historical settings, and writing about
their exploits. She enjoys meeting new people from all over the world and
learning about the craft of writing. When she can be separated from her laptop,
she is a professional time waster on Facebook, a slave to the towering stack of
books on her bedside table, and a bottler, preserving fruit the old fashioned
way so she can swap recipes and tips with her characters. Her home is in
central Queensland, Australia where she does not ride a kangaroo to the shops,
mainly because her children won't fit. Represented by Chip MacGregor of MacGregor Literary, she is a member of
American Christian Fiction Writers, and Romance Writers of America. Her Blog: https://lucythompsonauthor.com
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lucy.thompsonauthor Her New
book: Mail Order Surprise
No comments:
Post a Comment