Thank you so much to
Nicola Cornick for writing today’s article and giving us much food for thought
on how to add suspense into our writing.
I’ve always enjoyed adding a bit of intrigue to my
historical romances but when it came to writing a big romantic historical
mystery novel I knew I was going to have to weave a whole lot more suspense
into the story. For a pantser writer like me, plotting 3 different timelines
was a bit of a nightmare in
itself but I knew that the art of writing a
suspenseful story needed more than tight plotting. It needed twists and turns,
that element of surprise that makes readers think: “I didn’t see that coming”
and it needed PTQ, page-turning quality to keep them reading until 4am.
One of the best ways to learn is to study the masters of the
particular skill you want to develop and so I turned to my heroes, to Mary
Stewart, Daphne Du Maurier and Susanna Kearsley. “I met him in the street
called Strait” Mary Stewart writes at the beginning of The Gabriel Hounds,
and I’m hooked already by that hint of exoticism and the need to know who “he”
is. Daphne Du Maurier is another author
who uses atmosphere for great suspenseful effect, building up the reader’s
journey back into time in Frenchman’s Creek until you are there with her
characters centuries before. For me, a
sense of atmosphere and place can contribute a great deal to a story as you
wait on tenterhooks for something you know is about to happen…
In a podcast on suspense, thriller writer Harlan Coben says
that he always knows the ending of his books and the final twist and surprise.
Once he knows where he is heading he can lead the reader astray on the way. He
uses misdirection and plays with readers’ perceptions so that they think they
know how a story is unfolding but then he springs a surprise.
Harlan Coben distinguishes between suspense, which is
keeping the reader gripped and turning the pages, and surprise, which happens
when the books takes you somewhere you didn’t expect. He suggests that a corpse
is useful for creating suspense – readers want to know who committed the crime
– but that he finds a missing person more interesting. Anything that allows for an element of hope
raises the stakes in a suspense novel.
Research into suspenseful films, TV programmes and books has
suggested that an average of three plot twists is the optimum to use. Too few
twists and readers are bored; too many and they are overwhelmed. You need a
balance between these two states and it is better that the twists grow
organically from the story rather than appearing from left field. Sometimes,
though, a great twist can be too much. This happened to me when I got to the
end of House of Shadows. I had a
wonderful idea for an epilogue, something that added a huge final twist and put
an entirely different slant on the end of the story. Alas, this was a twist too
far. My editor suggested I take it out – unless I was planning a sequel!
Another way in which to create suspense is to build up the
emotional investment the characters have in their home, family, friends, all
the things that are important to them. As they wrestle with problems and
difficulties you can cut to the people who are really significant to them as a
way of emphasising the conflicts they are going through.
As I mentioned, that final twist is very important but at
the same time a romantic suspense novel has to do exactly what all other
romantic novels do and be a powerful and human story. So when you hit your
readers with that final surprise, it not only has to make them gasp with shock
but it also has to move them emotionally.
Links:
Thank you, Nicola and good luck with House of Shadows.
If you would like to write about the craft of writing please contact the blog on elaineeverest@aol.com
10 comments:
Thank you so much, Nicola. Really interesting. As a fellow pantser, I suspect I've been trying to put in too many plot twists in my early drafts. They can be exhausting to read,too. Intrigued that you think 3's about right. Shall go and apply!
And I'm very much looking forward to reading House of Shadows.
Yes, that's a good point, Jenny, about multi-twists becoming exhausting for the reader! We've all read books where the pace is so unrelenting that you just want things to calm down for a bit. For a pantser I think it's particularly hard because we have to get those ideas out there and then go back and look at it again to see whether there is a need for a better balance.
I thought 3 twists sounded quite a small number but I think they were suggesting 3 big twists and some smaller surprises along the way.
Fascinating. Thank you, Nicola. Your experience and insight is going to be a real help to me with my WIP.
Thank you, Madalyn, I am very happy it will be of use. Best of luck with the WIP!
Great post, Nicola - I love a touch of mystery or intrigue in novels but it's definitely more difficult to sustain! Love those authors you mentioned.
Thanks, Rosemary! It's good to know I'm not the only one who finds it tricky!
Really enjoyed this post – thank you! And like Rosemary, I share your writing heroes!
Thanks, Clare, I am so pleased you enjoyed it! I love that so many of us share these writing heroes!
Very useful, Nicola. I've got a novel that's a romantic suspense with possibly too many plot twists and it seems too complicated, so reading about the three-twist limit gives me an idea how to fix it. Thanks!
Thank you, Monica, I'm so pleased you found it helpful. I'm trying to apply it to my current wip too!
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