By Cliff Yeargin
This is my favorite time of the year.
Baseball season. I write a mystery series steeped in baseball, led by the
protagonist, a former professional baseball player. During my career as a
broadcast journalist I have spent countless hours, days, even years watching
and covering the game. The more I watch baseball, the more similarities I see
to the craft of writing.
At lot of people say baseball is a
boring game and it is built around tedium. Nine guys stand in the field and
wait for something to happen. One man on the mound stares in at another at the
plate…and they wait. Boring? Tedious? Not to the players or in the case of your
story, the characters.
The players, like your characters, are
busy during the tedious build up to action. An outfielder cheats in two steps,
the shortstop moves four feet to his left before the next pitch, the catcher
signals to the pitcher, a coach signals the hitter. Drama builds within the
tedium.
Writing, like baseball is built on
structure. You build characters a reader will follow during the tedious wait
for action. A batter steps out of the box, the pitcher yanks his cap down, it
could signal anticipation of what is to come. Is he scared? Is he angry? If the
game or your story is good, you don’t notice the structure, you simply get
drawn in by the drama.
All the work on structure, form, and
wordplay become invisible. The plotting and character development fall away
when the ‘ball is in play’ and the characters fight, flee, laugh or maybe gunfire
erupts.
For a writer, like a ballplayer, the
hard work takes place before the action. The hours it requires to build your
line-up of characters, setting up the backstory, building the tension, creating
anticipation, word by word, sentence by sentence. The tension built during
these boring moments is what keeps a
reader turning the page. And like in baseball, when the pitch is delivered, and
the action begins, the result is always unpredictable. A ground ball, a strike
out, a great catch or perhaps a long explosive home run. You don’t know what
will happen until the moment it occurs. The mystery of the outcome at the end
of each tedious moment is what keeps people watching the game.
As a writer, we should all strive for
the same. Build anticipation that will carry your characters through the
tedious times and keep your reader guessing what is going to happen at the next
Crack Of The Bat.
________________________________________________________________
Cliff Yeargin has spent his life as a
“Storyteller”, the bulk of that in a long career in Broadcast Journalism as a
Writer, Producer, Photographer and Editor. He is the author of the Award
Winning Jake Eliam, ChickenBone Mystery Series. The books include Rabbit Shine, Hoochy Koochy, named a 2016 Georgia Author of The Year Silver Medal
Finalist and MudCat Moon. The latest
book in the series BirdDog Boogie
will be released this spring. Yeargin has returned to his native Georgia home
and works at CNN. Follow the series @ cliffyeargin.com
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