The
Five Ingredients of the Scene
In
Novel Writing, Short Story Writing and the Memoir
1. Point
of View
2. Dialogue
3. Dramatic tension/Action
4. Mood
5. Flashback
1. Point of view or who's story are you
telling... POV puts you inside your main
character's head, heart and gut -- you are seeing the world through
the eyes of your character.
2. Dialogue is one of the fastest ways into character and
allows characters other than your POV character to reveal who
they are. Letting the dialogue "roll" often offers up
unexpected "what happens next?" and other surprises.
Dialogue is a great way to show tension. Glance through at a novel.
Most novels are anywhere between fifty and eighty percent dialogue.
Think you can't write dialogue. You can. I promise. Why am I so
sure? You talk, don't you? You can write dialogue. I've never
worked with anyone who can't write dialogue, only with people
who think they can't.
3. Dramatic Tension/Action. You can't have a story without dramatic tension. There
are many different ways to create dramatic tension, which can
come from something outside the character or something internal.
4. Mood, some people call
this description. Thinking mood instead of description is better
because mood is character driven. How does your character see
a scene? In other words, what the character sees is more important
than what you as the writer want to describe.
5. Flashback is a scene
from the past that informs the present and tells the reader something
important about the character. Once you are in the flashback,
you are once again in scene. All of the above applies.
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Emily Hanlon. All rights reserved. SM
Maybe be copied by permission.