When A Scene Isn’t Working













There comes a time when you have to face facts. You’ve tried
to convince yourself that scene where your main character goes back to her old
house and stares at it for four pages is a good scene, an important scene where
the reader learns things they need to know, but... it just isn’t a very
interesting scene.




You know this because none of the people who’ve read it have
ever said anything good about it. Quite a few have said bad things about it.
And most have not mentioned it at all. You could take their silence as a sign
they’re okay with it, but do you really want to write a story that’s just okay?




So, something’s got to change.







You basically have two options. You can cut the scene
completely, or you can make the scene better.




With the first option, it’s rare to be able to lift out the
scene and that’s it. Sometimes it is possible, if the scene was unrelated to
the plot and just a fun interlude of some sort, but mostly it will either have
to be replaced with a new scene, or the information contained in the old scene
will have to be worked into the rest of the story somehow.




Personally, I think a brand new scene works best (although
it requires more work). If things happened in the old scene that are pertinent
to later events and you try to squeeze that info into other places, it can end
up feeling like heavy-handed exposition.




You cut the scene where Sandra meets Debra and finds out
about the new shopping mall being built in town, and you go straight to the
scene where she’s having dinner with her husband. But instead of getting
straight into the action, you now have half a page of:




“So where were you this afternoon?”

“I went to see Debra. You’ll never guess what she told
me...”




There’s no point cutting a scene that isn’t working only to
add a summary of the scene that didn’t work. If you cut you have to really cut.





The second option, improving the scene, is usually the best
way to proceed, although writers are resistant to making the kinds of changes
required. A few line edits and introducing a chatty waiter aren’t going to be
enough.




You have to really go back to basics and work out what
you’re trying to do with the scene and come up with a completely new approach
to getting that message across. I’m not saying there aren’t ways to tweak the
current version into working, but once you’ve spent so much time with Version
A, it’s going to be very hard to see it any other way than how it already is.
You’ve been honing and trimming and getting it just so for so long that being
able to see it fresh will be nearly impossible.




Far easier is to go back to the start of the scene and start
again. Take into account where the characters were just prior to the beginning
of the scene. How did that affect them? What mood are they in? What are they hoping
will happen now? And then the first time a choice needs to be made, if you went
left in Version A, go right in Version B. The more different you make it, the
easier it will be to come up with fresh ideas.




And it’s important to remember if Version B ends up being
even worse than the original, that doesn’t make Version A any better. It still
doesn’t work, it’s just that Version B was worse. So, time to start working on
Version C...



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~*~





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Published on November 29, 2012 10:00
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