In a thought-provoking post over at Glimmer Train, Josh Weil talks about Vladmir Nabokov’s rule: If you bring a gun into the story, then it must fire by the end.
Weil reverses it to produce a new insight: “If you’re going to fire a gun at the end, you’d better bring it in near the beginning.” He goes on to discuss how the emotions that will drive action need to be seeded early:
When a character does something (say, suddenly draws a gun out of his pants waist), that action must be supported by actions that have come before; the mentality that causes it needs to be developed before the action happens. Long before.
Go read the full post.
Also this month at Glimmer Train:
Excuses, Pobrecita by Caro Beth Clark
Worrying the Culture Toward Peace by Sabina Murray
The post Sow Your Characters’ Emotions in Early appeared first on Jane Friedman and was written by Jane Friedman.
Published on August 01, 2014 02:00