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Writing Engaging Scenes
copyright Daniel Arenson
July 10, 2007
Hi everyone,
It's been a few weeks since my last "writing tips" article. Previously I've discussed outlining, characterizations, constructing effective sentences, and novelizing scripts. Here, in my fifth entry, I'd like to discuss creating effective scenes.
How do we define a scene? The simplest, easiest definition would be "a
chunk of writing that appears as a subunit within a story or
chapter". Such subunits are often separates by blank lines or five asterisks.
But is any such chunk of writing truly a "scene"? I often see writers
(myself included, when I'm not careful) creates "scenes" that are, in
a sense, not scenes at all. Just because a bit of your story appears as an individual unit doesn't necessarily make it a true "scene"--or at least, not a very engaging one.
I recently found myself writing a scene with the following format:
The characters walked along a seashore, ate lunch, discussed their
quest, and went to sleep. In the next scene, they woke up and
continued their quest.
I realized that this scene was pointless. True, it provided
some dialogue that enhanced characterization. True, it offered details about the setting and quest. But did it advance the plot? Hardly.
I rewrote the scene. Now, the characters never paused for the night.
There was no description of them lying down to bed, falling asleep,
then waking up in the morning. Instead, they walk along the
seashore until they encounter a horrible obstacle--a monster from
their past who attacks them. The scene ends with a cliffhanger,
leaving the reader uncertain about the heroes’ fate.
The scene now advances the story. It introduces a new obstacle in the
plot and hopefully leaves the reader wanting more. It moves quickly and avoids unnecessary details.
I like to think of each scene as serving a purpose. In my example,
the scene introduced the monster. Other scenes might introduce other
conflicts or new characters, resolve previous conflicts, etc.
As an exercise, I sometimes try to describe the scene's purpose in a
single sentence. "This is the scene that introduces the princess and
lets the hero fall in love with her."
If I find a scene which does not advance the plot, I consider rewriting it or omitting it all together. Sometimes I'll find a scene whose sole purpose is to introduce data
("infodump") about the characters or setting. These scenes do not
advance the storyline, so I like to rewrite or omit them. I want
each scene to contain drama and emotion, possibly ending with a cliffhanger to keep the reader turning the pages.
What do you think? How do you construct effective scenes? Let me know.
Thanks,
Daniel
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