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Showing posts with the label action

Tuesday Choice Words

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As a playwright, I find dialogue relatively easy to come by. However, writing an action scene (and there are plenty of those in the novel I'm working on) is quite a challenge. Fiction University came to my rescue with two articles, P ut Up Your Dukes - Writing A Fight Scene and Finding The Balance when writing about Violence . Have a look. Stephen King Answers Questions

Action vs Surprise

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I may be showing my age here but when I was a child, I would take great delight in watching the Mission Impossible TV series with all its twists and turns, skeleton masks and mock rooms. The spies involved were sophisticated, clever and incredibly laid back.  No one seemed to run anywhere. Their plans were so well planned and timed that each action slotted into the next with apparent ease. Nowadays I would probably be able to predict what was going to happen in most episodes but back then, when audience expectations were different and I was a child, their schemes were genius. Excitement in books is often equated to action - a fight, a chase, a death defying leap - and it is true that action can help to maintain pace. As a reader, as well as a writer, I enjoy the thrill of a heart wrenching escape as much as anyone. However, there is one other element that can occasionally work just as well. Surprise your reader. Throw something into the mix that they could never have dreamt...