This past Saturday I watched some unbelievable football. At
the close of the Packers-Cardinals game, the commentators kept saying they
couldn’t believe the play they’d just seen. The Packers’ desperation long pass
and reception as time expired was virtually unprecedented.
Except for those who’d seen Aaron Rogers throw a similar
game-saving pass a few weeks earlier against the Lions. The first unbelievable
reception prepared people to accept what would otherwise have seemed impossible.
The same principle applies in fiction. If you want readers
to believe the scene as your protagonist pulls a rabbit out of a hat, you’d
better first establish that there’s a hat ... and a rabbit. And several times throughout
the story, you’d better show your protagonist performing some modest magic.
Likewise if you plan a closing-scene rescue by having the
cavalry appear over the hill.
Awhile back, I pointed out that problem to an author whose
novel I was giving a developmental edit. He had some supporting characters
provide an unexpected rescue. Too unexpected. I encouraged him to insert a new
scene a few chapters earlier that showed the cavalry overcoming obstacles as
they rode toward the hill. With that preparatory material, readers were no
longer bounced out of the story by wondering “Where’d the cavalry come from?”
In the author’s mind, the cavalry had been trooping toward
the rescue. But in the rush of writing the story, that vital, minor scene got
skipped. And with it, a perceptive reader’s ability to enjoy the finale.
An easy fix, but only once the problem was identified. If
you want to end your story with a convincing bang, make sure your beta readers
keep their eyes peeled for white rabbits and top hats. Inserted in your story,
they work like magic.
3 comments:
Excellent post Andy. It is funny how a writers mind can jump plot structure and miss vital points the story and the reader need. Though it is every authors goal to give their reader a satisfying read, without the eyes of beta readers, they can fail. Thank you for stating the point so well here. I will definitely be sharing this post with my clients and conferrees at the conferences I attend this year.
It's a particular peril when authors fall behind in their schedule and try to rush the process.
Great post! Gotta' hit your characters with obstacles....
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