Move along now - some thoughts on pace

As a writer, the question of pace dominates my thinking. Whether I am doing final edits on a novel or starting a new one (both of which I have done in the past week) the rate at which the story moves is crucial.

Pace should not be confused with speed. A story with good pace need not necessarily move fast but what it will do is move at a pace that ensures that the reader does not become bored.

The key is to work out the job that each passage does  - what do you want a scene to achieve? Is it to pass on plot information, is it there to inject energy through dramatic events, is it there for right relief?

Having identified the end goal, the writer needs to ensure that every word, every piece of dialogue, every event, helps achieve it. If it doesn’t, it’s slowing down the pace and must go.

So, it’s a good idea to read through your draft and pick out any areas where you feel the plot slows. Keep only what is necessary to tell the story.

It may mean cutting out scenes that you thought were important when you wrote them. That happened to me with my recent novel, Last Man Alive. My editor at publisher The Book Folks suggested that three fairly short sections could go. I thought that they were important but, having looked at them again, they only repeated what had been said elsewhere in a different form and were disrupting the pace of the story. When I deleted them, the story was none the worse for it.

It's those kind of decisions that can dramatically improve a novel because get the pace right and you’ll keep the reader turning the page.

Views: 18

Add a Comment

You need to be a member of John Dean Crime Novelist to add comments!

Join John Dean Crime Novelist

Latest Activity

John Dean shared their blog post on Facebook
Friday
John Dean shared their blog post on Facebook
Thursday
John Dean shared their blog post on Facebook
Thursday
John Dean shared their blog post on Facebook
Thursday
John Dean shared their blog post on Facebook
Apr 14
John Dean shared their blog post on Facebook
Apr 14
John Dean shared their blog post on Facebook
Apr 14
John Dean posted a blog post

Taking the reader into the heart of the action

Review: Murder at the Caravan by David Pearson (The Book Folks)Authors are driven to write by a range of inspirations, everything from compelling character to mysterious plots, from the need to write with pace to an instinctive feel for landscape, from powerful themes to sharply political points that emerge from their stories. For many of the very best crime writers, a…See More
Apr 14
John Dean posted blog posts
Apr 11
John Dean posted a blog post

Author re-launches online crime fiction course

Best-selling crime novelist and creative writing tutor John Dean has launched the latest version of his online Crime Fiction Course.The course, which runs in eight parts and can begin at a time and date to suit the writer, helps emerging authors to improve their writing and aims to increase their chances of being successful, either in competitions or admissions to…See More
Apr 9
John Dean shared their blog post on Facebook
Apr 3
John Dean shared their blog post on Facebook
Apr 3
John Dean posted a blog post

Crime writer ready for challenges ahead

I was pleased to hear that crime writer Vanessa Fox O’Loughlin has been elected as the new Chair of the Society of Authors.The novelist takes over from Joanne Harris to begin a two-year term as Chair of the SoA’s board of directors. Joanne has held the position since 2020 and has now come to the end of her second two-year term.Vanessa, who writes crime as Irish…See More
Apr 3
John Dean posted blog posts
Mar 26
John Dean shared their blog post on Facebook
Mar 26
John Dean shared their blog post on Facebook
Mar 26

Videos

Members

© 2024   Created by John Dean.   Powered by

Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service