By Janice Hardy, @Janice_Hardy Even when a draft is going well, there’s bound to be at least one scene in a novel that gives us trouble. Maybe we’re not sure how it unfolds, or we’re missing a key emotional component, or it might even be that we’re not ready to write it or just don’t want to deal with whatever the scene covers right now.
When this happens, we usually get stuck. It might feel like writer’s block, but it’s not—it’s just a hard-to-write scene.
This happened to me recently, though it was more like four chapters (and entire story-structure turning point) than a single scene. These chapters cover the Dark Moment and launch act three, and there’s
a lot of heavy, emotional stuff going on. The problem, is that I have a lot of stuff going on in my own life, so I flat out didn’t feel up to plunging myself into all that heartbreak and soul searching to do these chapters justice.
So I didn’t. Instead, I blitzed past it.
Read more »Written by Janice Hardy. Fiction-University.com
Published on April 25, 2018 04:45