In the throes of
inspiration, it is easy to get caught up
in the action and write a 150,000 paragraph. Okay, that isn’t actually likely
to happen. However, I have seen some long chapters. Let’s make this simple. We used to say, “Back
at the ranch …”
Think of this: A
chapter change occurs when the location, time, people changes. Granted there is
some license taken with this. But, start there.
What about scene
breaks? I put in scene breaks when the rhythm of the read changes by ONE of the
above factors; location, time, person. Think of it like a big comma, the story continues, but there is
a signal that there is a change. Whereas, a chapter break is more like a full
stop (period) in my analogy.
I’ve said this
before, but the absolute best writing book that I have read is a scriptwriting
book. The Complete Book of Scriptwriting
by J. Michael Straczynski should be in your library. My copy has underlined sections,
notes in the margin, and stickies popping out from the edge of the book. The
single most important lesson, I think, is the section on camera angles. Get the
book. Read it. Thank me later.
For a reliable
place to visit for writing tips and lessons check out: http://www.writersdigest.com.
I recently found
this program, which I haven’t fully tested, grammerly.com – I’m testing the
free version. Let me know if you try it and what you think.
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