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By Marg McAlister
"Dan
stood on the wet paving, his arms limp by his side, his jaw hanging in
horror, as he peered through a crack in the curtains. Before him a man
crept towards the figure of his wife as she lay on the sofa.
"Leave my wife alone," his mind screamed silently. His mouth formed the words but no sound would come.
On
the sofa his wife smiled and opened her arms invitingly. Dan did not
notice his car keys drop from between his numb fingers. They landed in
a puddle at his feet with a dull jangle. At the sound, the stranger
turned toward the window. Dan's heart skipped a beat as he recognized
the swarthy features of the man inside his home..
He wondered how hard it would be to murder his best friend."
Did that little excerpt leave you wanting more? I hope so - that was the point.
Conflict
is the driving force behind all good fiction. Without it, there is no
story. The good news is, creating conflict is much easier than you
might believe.
Many new writers believe that adding conflict
to a story is as simple as inserting violence into the plot line.
Nothing could be further from the truth. The conflict in the example
above is only present in Dan's emotional state. Physically, he has not
moved from the window.
Let me give you an example of writing without conflict.
Dan
arrived home from work. He stepped out of the car and hurried up the
drive to escape the rain. Through a crack in the curtains he spied his
wife awaiting his arrival. She was curled up on the sofa, a serene
little smile on her face. His car keys fell from his grasp and he
stooped to pick them up, before hurrying into the house.
Now, tell me - would you like to see 400 more pages like this?
Did
you happen to notice that Dan's point of view is exactly the same in
both examples? He is still outside, peering through a crack in the
curtains, watching his wife on the sofa. The difference is, I have
created tension and suspense by adding emotional conflict about what
Dan is seeing and feeling.
Also in the first example, I have
added the hint that it is raining. This is to introduce a sense of
physical conflict. Dan's first impulse should be to run into the house.
He ignores this impulse and endures the physical discomfort, because he
is emotionally preoccupied.
In the second example, there really
is no reason for the reader to want to continue. Nothing special or
unusual is happening to the characters. Nothing untoward is going on.
Where is the point in continuing to turn pages?
Risk
In
the first example above, Dan is trying to deal with the conflicting
emotions of watching his wife with another man. The final line,
however, introduces an element of risk. Morally, murdering a man is
incomrehensible to most people. And yet, faced with a big enough
emotional dilemma, Dan considers the risk. Most importantly, we touched
on a nerve inside Dan that shows the reader why he is acting and feeling the way he is.
Inserting
conflict for the sake of it becomes pointless unless the character is
facing a certain degree of risk. In this scenario, Dan could be
imprisoned for the rest of his life if he proceeds with the intent of
murder. The situations and feelings that your characters must live
through should still feel believable to the reader.
If I had
written that Dan simply walked into the house and punched his friend in
the face, the risk becomes non-existent. Dan has nothing to lose
(except maybe his wife) and the reader has no reason to continue
reading.
Empathy
Most
people can relate to Dan's feelings of helplessness and hopelessness
while he stares into the window. This situation also encompasses some
peoples' deepest fear, so the suspense is more poignant because of this.
But,
even though Dan is contemplating murder, most people can empathize with
him, because the dilemma he is in is one that people can relate to.
Imagine
how you would have felt if Dan had raced inside, thrown off his coat
and joined in with trysting pair? The conflict is diffused, the empathy
is shattered and the reader is thrown off balance.
When creating
a scene, bear in mind that your readers want to see the protagonist
win. But there is no point in winning at all if the stakes were never
high enough to make them care about your hero in the first place.
Raise the Stakes
Okay,
Dan's wife is having an affair with his best friend. Is this enough
conflict to keep a reader turning pages in anticipation for 400 pages?
Probably not.
Sure, Dan is contemplating murdering his best
friend. But he hasn't actually done anything. He's still staring into
the window, remember? Is this enough to keep a reader enthralled for
another 400 pages? I doubt it.
Once the initial shock of the first conflict is over, the reader is going to want fresh conflict to keep the suspense high.
It's time to raise the stakes.
"A
rolling boom of thunder heralded a flash of lightning and the rain gave
way to a barrage of stinging hailstones. Dan shook his head, his daze
lifted, and backed away from the window. He ran through the blinding
hail back towards his car, his mind working furiously. He had always
kept a small gun in the glove compartment, but he no idea whether or
not it was loaded. A quick check reassured him that it was.
He
swallowed down the tears that threatened to overcome him at the thought
of shooting the two people he loved most in the world and ran back to
the house."
So
now Dan is no longer simply contemplating murder. He's really going to
do it! This forces the reader to start asking questions. Will he do it?
And if he does kill them both, will he get caught? How will he ever
escape a double homicide charge?
Not only does this increase the
tension of our little story, but it throws the reader into a kind of
dilemma, too. Is it possible to still feel empathy for a protagonist
who is about to become a cold-blooded killer? Your reader will simply
have to keep reading to find out.
Rising Complications
Once
Dan kills his wife and best friend, where does a writer go from there?
Once the trysting couple are dead, then what? Of course, Dan will need
to contend with escaping the long arm of the law, he'll have to face
his own conscience ...
Or we could lead the reader into a situation that is even more menacing than the first.
"Dan
crept into the living room, arm outstretched, gun wavering uncertainly
before him. With an effort, he stilled his shaking hand and took
another step into the room. The entwined couple on the sofa had not yet
noticed his entrance. He took a deep breath, steeling himself against
the nausea that bubbled up from the pit of his stomach and poised his
finger over the trigger.
"... and so, darling, if you push him down the stairs, it will look like the perfect accident."
"Will you help me with the... you know... the body?"
"Of course. No one will ever know. I'm too high up in the force to be questioned about an investigation like this. "
Phew!
Just when the reader thought it might not be okay to like a homicidal
husband as a protagonist, it turns out that his cheating wife and best
friend are plotting to kill him anyway.
The problem is, he knows
that they want him dead and he can't go the police - not now that we
know the friend is a member of the police force. Who would ever believe
his story over the word of an officer?
Is it likely the reader will continue to turn pages to find out how he manages to beat these odds?
Creating
conflict should be as simple as continuing to ask yourself questions
during every scene - and then forcing yourself to be honest about the
answer.
Ask about the actions of your characters
Is your hero reacting in a realistic way to the conflict you have thrown at him? Would he really do that?
Ask about the situations you have written
Would he really go and get a gun?
Is the situation really desperate enough to contemplate murder?
Ask about the continuity
Does this scene move the story forward?
Should I stop the story to describe every piece of the scenery to my readers so they get the mental image clearly?
Is
a scene showing Dan sitting on the loo for forty minutes, humming the
theme song to the Simpsons going to increase or decrease tension?
But most importantly, ask questions about your readers
Why should the reader care what happens to your characters?
Why should the reader keep turning those pages?
Why would the reader want to read what happens next?
© Copyright Lee Masterson. All rights reserved.
About the Author
Marg McAlister writing sites and ezines are full of up-to-date, practical advice for writers. Get timely tips to ensure writing success both online and in print: http://www.Writing4SuccessClub.com
http://www.writing4success.com
http://www.EsssentialGuidetoGhostwriting.com
Copyright © 2010 Socialpolitan a Subsidiary of OHS Enterprises.
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