Tension

I've been working feverishly to edit In the Bones so that I can start querying agents and publishers in my neverending quest to make it to every slushpile on the planet. I'm making quite a dent by the way. As you may have guessed, my optimism is waning. *sigh*



But that's not the point of this post. While editing, a dear author friend who believes that pulling any punches will result in something horrific happening between himself and Karma, pointed out that my tension sucked. The characters are good, most of the action is good, but where's the motivation? Why would a reader turn the page? He also pointed out that I was telling the reader far more than I was showing. Disgusted with myself, I looked at the manuscript with new eyes. You know, this freelancing stuff is a great way to pay the bills, but writing articles requires a far different mindset than writing fiction. My problem is that I have a hard time switching gears, moving from one mode of writing to the other. So while some days I'd write a great section of story, but my assignment edits came in by the thousands, another day I'd write 2000 or so words of story that tell, tell, tell but had no edits on my assignments. Don't worry, I've fixed it. I adjusted my schedule too so that I wasn't doing both on the same day.



What did I mean to say? Right, tension. How do I build tension? What is this tension? How much? Where and when? Oh, I had so many questions. Building tension is actually very simple. Figuring out if your novel has it is even easier. I'll share:



Read your novel in scenes. Take one chapter and read scene one. What would you rate that bad boy on a scale of 1 to 10? Yes, the key is that the writer has to be brutally honest with herself. If you're not, well you're only hurting your chances of getting published. So, do what you will. Do the same for the remaining scenes in that chapter. When you're done, you'll have something like 2, 4, 3. Okay? So the first scene is pretty good, but not edge of your seat tension. I mean, come on, we've only just met the protagonist, so the reader has nothing invested yet. The tension is more of a curiosity to know what will happen next rather than an all-consuming need to find out more. The second scene, we've pushed the envelope a bit. The tension increases dramatically with the introduction of a major conflict. Perhaps the protagonist finds a letter which informs him he has three days to escape certain death. Again, it's not a 10 because the reader is not completely emotionally attached. The third scene, well it's okay. It's not as intense as the previous, but it's moving along faster than the first. The reader is curious, but not blown away.



You rate the tension based on factors like action, dialogue, conflict, and most importantly, does it move the reader to turn the page? Let's say it's got tons of action, a good amount of dialogue and the conflict is great. However, you've wrapped up the entire scene and handed it to the reader in a neat little package. Oh...and you have about four paragraphs of exposition on the second page of the scene. How does the tension rate? Low. Why? Because although you have all of this stuff happening, you haven't kept the pace moving. The exposition slowed it down. Also, you wrapped it up so well, the reader has no questions. No reason to keep going. So while the rest is good, two of the most important factors, pace and motivation for the reader to go on, are shitty.



Do the same for every chapter and then make a little graph. Come on, you know you want to.  If you're as inept as I am you might have something like this:



Look, I'm really technologically challenged, so let's not mention the shittiness of that graph or how it's creeping off the page into the sidebar. Okay? Good. Looking at the line, we see the tension begins well, rising nicely and then it takes a nosedive and levels out. These are the scenes that we want to look at more closely on rewrite. The tension should slowly build to the climax, part of that whole rising action thing. So areas that dip or level off as in chapter two of our example, need to be revamped to push that line upward, rather than down. How? Examine the scene. How does it end? Did you resolve it completely and tie a pretty little ribbon on it? Not good. We want the reader to turn the page. So instead of ending it with a resolution, we end it slightly before, moving the resolution to the next scene. See how easy that is?



But what if I did end it on a cliffhanger? Why is it so suckish? How much action and dialogue are there in comparison to exposition? Exposition, as I mentioned earlier slows the pace, which breaks the tension. Try to rewrite to remove it and then have another look. Better? It should be.



I have no exposition and a kickass cliffhanger ending, but it still reads kind of flat. Okay, does anything happen? Oh I know they drove to the bar and had a few drinks, but why? What was the purpose? What was it either during that drive or while having drinks that served to move the plot forward? Nothing? This is where the writer has to be tough. If it does nothing, delete it. Can't? Try to move it or add something that moves the story along, that furthers the main goal of the protagonist. Each scene must serve a purpose. It must move the story along. Otherwise, it's fluff. We don't want fluff.



There are many ways to boost tension. So I turn it over to you, dear friends. How do you create tension in your novels?





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Published on April 15, 2011 07:14
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message 1: by Nikki (new)

Nikki Broadwell I try to end every chapter with a reason for the reader to turn the page--a question or a scary situation etc...sometimes tension can become so great that there needs to be a breather--something to slow things down for a minute or two--also, I think character development has to come before tension because if we aren't attached to the characters the tension is for naught...It is easier to accomplish when writing fantasy, I think. I'm working on a sort of memoir that revolves around the second world war that is a tension creator because of what's happening in the outside world. Tension can be created just by the protagonist having an internal conflict or question he or she needs to answer...I like your post.


message 2: by Renee (new)

Renee I think both are equally important. I might care about the character, but if the plot is boring, I'm not going to keep reading. Tension comes in many forms, it doesn't mean all action, all the time. For example, Fever 1793isn't all action. Much of it is internal dialogue, but the tension in this book is amazing. I was so eager to know what happened to her in the end, what happened to her mother, her friends, that I had to keep reading. She used the questions surrounding the fate of these people to build the tension until the very end, while throughout the story, we experienced the protagonist's struggles to survive a tragic event. Of course, there was more to the story than just the fever, but it wasn't 'action packed'.

Without that tension, I'd have loved the character, but I wouldn't have been interested enough to speed through the book in a couple of days.


message 3: by Rita (new)

Rita Webb Fever 1793 is a great example of tension. How was this done? At the end of the first chapter, the POV's childhood friend dies. From that point on you know trouble is lurking around every corner. Even when they are doing mundane things like serving coffee in their coffee shop, you're wondering who is going to be hit next.


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