mad at me by ending on a cliffhanger.
I might be mad but I think you could end the second-to-last chapter with the army in peril and then have a solid conclusion with the heroes in the last chapter, so it felt final but left you wanting more.
A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.
mad at me by ending on a cliffhanger.
I might be mad but I think you could end the second-to-last chapter with the army in peril and then have a solid conclusion with the heroes in the last chapter, so it felt final but left you wanting more.
I suppose you could keep the Major Gloom's trek to Mordor, if you're clever and don't relate why he's alone or what message he bears. Maybe even be so vague so as the reader doesn't even know he comes from the Former Army of Save the Day-ness...just, every now and again the reader can go "Who is this intriguing fellow starving to death in a mountain pass? Hmmm..."
As a reader, if these interludes are not either clearly connected, or really engaging, I find them frustrating and wtf.
I rather like ita's idea, of the big army going into battle as the epilogue for Book 1 (If I'm reading that right), even if that doesn't answer the when for characters or reader.
unofficial whoot! for Jilli.
Well, I feel like for structural reasons it would need to be an epilogue, because otherwise I'd be introducing a whole new setting and set of POV characters in the second-to-last chapter. While the faraway army is discussed throughout the book, they're never an on-screen presence, and I'm limiting myself strictly to five POV characters no matter how tempted I am to wander into other heads. So if I break that structure, I'd rather do it as sort of a bookend to the main narrative.
Susan, what if you make specific reference to a particular character enough that he feels like a character we know, and then jump to him as PoV with the cavalry. That might give continuity.
I am definitely with you that it would need to be an epilogue.
Ok, so I got rejected by a magazine that we can just call Artistic_Cachet for my purposes. Because it's one of those ones writing teachers love, but I'm not mad at them specifically...being on the other end of the rejection slip has made me take that a bit less personally. But I'm afraid I'm not growing as a writer, and I don't know how.(Yeah, I know, practice.) But I don't have time or money to read every literary magazine in america and start trying to write "New Yorker" stories, "Glimmer train" stories and etc. I need to do what I do...better.That's why a class wouldn't work(that, and no $$)because I tend to hero-worship and try to please the instructors. And I hated my last writing group.
I want to post a lovely interview with my friend Nancy, who finally made it as a writer after decades of doing menial jobs and barely getting by. [link]
It might sound like my last post was whiny, but I'm asking: How can I get better?
I need to do what I do...better.That's why a class wouldn't work(that, and no $$)because I tend to hero-worship and try to please the instructors. And I hated my last writing group.
I hate to say it, but I think you know. There really isn't any answer aside from keep writing, and keep reading in the genres you want to write it (and others, actually, because you can still learn things about style and voice and construction anywhere).
I'm also not sure what's wrong with pleasing a teacher. If it's a teacher you respect, then you're golden, really. I have huge pleasing-people issues, but I also had a writing teacher at NYU who helped me enormously, really pushed me, and I still remember and use the things she taught me about narrative and honesty (with regard to fiction).
Hello thread. I just resubscribed to this thread. I may never contribute, but it feels odd to me to lurk without announcing my presence. So, I am here enjoying the spicy writer brains.
Erika, of course what Amy said. I just wanted to add that you have a unique voice and personality and it is worth your time and frustration to continue the work. If you hated the last writing group, try try again, and again. I have no clue whatsoever what I am talking about, but likely you have to keep trying different groups until you find a good fit. And then you likely will outgrow that group or get chased out by the angry mob and will have to seek another.
Hot tea with no carb goodness on the side:
Nice article about Nancy! I love the 5 years, times up element. How often things happen at just the last moment.