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How to make your story flow
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While you don't want the story to go to fast or to slow you want to make sure you hold the reader's attention. Too much detail can leave them bored and cause them to stop reading. Everything can be fixed in revisions though. My rule is write, read, revise.



I would also suggest you try to add detail after detail about everything... The scenery, the appearances of the characters, their facial expressions, etc. I know that when I write, I always feel like I'm piling on too many details. But when I reread my writing, I always find that I should've added more to slow down the pace. So, don't worry about describing too much! You can always cut the unnecessary sentences out in your revisions ;)

Flow is different, IMO. Flow is that the elements of the story (narrative, description, dialog) fuse together as seamlessly as possible for the reader' they're there because they have to be there. It's like a pancake recipe, many possible flavors, but no one wants to bite into a lump of just one of the ingredients (unless it's a blueberry)

What are your tips about writing with good flow?

With dialog, this also follows with description. What and how would your character communicate with people? Natural flows of conversation include unfinished thoughts spoken out, as two people who know each other can just hint at certain things. A key thing in writing dialog is not to underestimate the intelligence of readers. Sometimes an innocent action reveals half a page of dialog you don't need.
Look at the relationships between two characters, and the personalities of your important characters. How would each of them talk to the other? If you start two people out in a communicating pattern, that pattern shouldn't change unless the relationship changes. The short of that is to keep dialog realistic and consistent.
Flow, to try to sum up all of that, is making your characters, their goals, their obstacles, real. Even if you're writing sci-fi/fantasy, whatever. Characters are real, goals are real, obstacles are real.
One last tip. Every story has back-story, every character does too. You'll get more flow, and more power too, if you keep exposing back-story to a minimum, basically only as it comes up in the narrative of the story. A little goes a long way.
Hope that helped.

I'll be standing in my kitchen, spouting away ideas that make my characters unique, discussing the chemistry between the two, and how they are both alike and different.
It assists in getting into the mindset of your people and all in all, helps to make their decisions and conflicts more realistic.
Also, it's fun.
You don't want your story to be too fast or too slow. When it seems to be going too quick, add a ton of detail into your story. Have your character stop and think; describe the scenery; insert dialogue... stuff like that could really help enhance your story and improve the flow.
Also, I find that revising while I work just ruins my process of thought, which causes the words to lose their rhythm. So I would advise against rereading what you've written every few sentences... just go with the flow ;) and write out whatever comes to mind. There's always room for revision later.
So those are my thoughts. I would love to hear your own comments about the matter :D