One of the best and the worst things in writing fiction is to get your characters into a situation that’s difficult to get out of. It creates a quagmire not only for them, but for you, the author. There’s nothing quite like the moment when you figure out how to release them from an impossible situation. There’s nothing better for your readers than not being able to figure out where the story is going. It makes them want to keep reading. It’s the goal of the author to create such an irresistible environment.
But what if you’ve put your characters into a place that’s so boggy that the only way to get them out is for something convenient to happen? They’re adrift at sea and the sharks are circling… oh look! It’s a helicopter! That sort of thing just doesn’t fly (pardon) with most readers.
Do you keep trying to come up with a way out? Or do you start again, and put them into an easier situation? Personally I hate giving up on these sorts of difficulties. Because the solution, when it comes to me, is one of the best feelings in the world.
Giggity.
For your convenience, a quick link to see how the problems are adding up in my A-Z fiction, here: http://lindaghillfiction.wordpress.com/2014/04/19/q-is-for-quest-for-harry/
Pingback: Z is for Zephyr | Alex Hurst
April 20, 2014 at 1:03 pm
This is a good point. Sometimes I feel like I’m not good in creating impossible situations!
LikeLike
April 20, 2014 at 3:11 pm
Many times, difficult ones work just as well if not better than impossible ones. 😛
Thanks for reading, Franny. 🙂
LikeLike