Interesting Chit Chat

mooderino:


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Small talk isboring. Characters who waffle on about the weather and the dream they had last
night and their favourite toy when they were a kid don’t hold a reader’s
attention for very long.


At the same
time, characters who enter a scene, get what they want, and leave can make the
story feel rushed and sterile.


There are, of course,
plenty of books that use the more rushed approach and it can work very well. It
makes it much easier to keep the reader hooked and turning pages. Many
bestsellers use this approach, although they don’t win many literary awards.


But we’ve all
read books that had long passages of seemingly random observations and
conversations that not only didn’t read as boring, but actually added to the
story. You felt a stronger connection to the character because of the glimpse
into their personality. So how did they manage it when your attempts feel like
meandering asides and unnecessary tangents? 


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Published on March 09, 2015 20:03
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