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Recently, my critique group noticed that one person’s chapter just seemed to be dragging. That was an unusual problem for this particular writer but there was no doubt about it. Although dialogue was clever and his main character still captivated us, it just felt slow. We spend some time discussing how to speed things up so I was already thinking about the topic when I saw this post by K.M. Weiland.
First things first, lets start with three ways to speed things up because what we were discussing in critique group were scenes that drag:
Just as important as speeding things up is slowing things down. This is most often a problem when we are writing a high-impact high action scene. How do you make a fist fight last for two or three pages? Or we are writing one of those important squirm inducing scenes. If this is a your climax or other pivotal scene, you have to give it the weight of a length. Do this by slowing things down. Here are three ways you can do this.
Pacing is a pivotal part of fiction writing. If it is too fast for too long, you will wear your reader out. If it is too slow, you will bore them. Learn to adjust things as needed and make your writing sing.
–SueBE
To find out more about Sue Bradford Edwards writing, visit her blog, One Writer’s Journey.
Sue is also the instructor for Writing Nonfiction for Children and Young Adults.
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