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July 29, 2010
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Excerpt from Novel Shortcuts
February 23, 2009
In this excerpt from Chapter Three: Crosshairs Moments from Laura Whitcomb’s Novel Shortcuts, you’ll learn: • Why it’s so important to build you story around pivotal plot points • Three tips for building a strong story crosshairs moment • Three tips for echoing crosshairs moments throughout your story MASTER YOUR STORY’S CROSSHAIRS MOMENTS
The crosshairs of a story, like the crosshairs in the scope on a rifle, must be precisely aimed at your target—that most pivotal moment in your plot. The crosshairs moment, to be exact. And it’s crucial to note, especially before we get too far along, that there are different levels of crosshairs moments: the story crosshairs moment and the chapter crosshairs moments. Your overarching story crosshairs moment falls on the biggest turning point in your story, often the action’s climax. Your individual chapter crosshairs moments, on the other hand, are the most important things that happen in each chapter. They fall on turning points as well, crucial junctures where the plot or character arc (sometimes both) changes direction or makes a leap in energy. The reason you need to make sure you know exactly where your crosshairs lie is because these are the points you’ll write toward and away from. These critical moments are what you need to showcase, the moments that create the shape of your story. IDENTIFYING THE STORY CROSSHAIRS MOMENT Naming crosshairs in a book you are reading can be subjective. For instance, in The Dead Zone by Stephen King, you may feel that the overarching crosshairs moment is when the protagonist, Johnny Smith, first discovers the “dead zone,” which demonstrates that his premonitions may not necessarily have to happen. This, you may believe, is the story crosshairs moment because it gives a new significance to Johnny’s gift of prophecy. It’s a discovery that will lead to the climax and conclusion of the book. But your friend might choose the moment Johnny poses the philosophical question: “If you had a time machine, would you go into the past and kill Hitler?” (Only for Johnny it’s not so theoretical.) Maybe your friend argues that this is the real story crosshairs moment because it’s when the protagonist explains the potential power of the “dead zone” to the readers—if Johnny can assassinate a politician that he can see will one day destroy the world, his gift will have a profound benefit for humankind. Subjectivity. When it comes to your own writing, though, you need to be able to identify the main story crosshairs moment with precision because (1) it’s your story, (2) you need to build up tension to that dramatic moment, and (3) you need to let that tension ripple outward in widening circles of impact. Let your readers get wrapped up in the story and carried away. Let them debate your storytelling crosshairs, the way you and your friends may have fought over the Dead Zone moment. But you need to know where that moment is. Let’s look at how Stephen King wrote toward and away from the crosshairs in The Dead Zone. Building to the Story Crosshairs Moment To make sure that your readers feel the intended impact of the crosshairs moment of your novel, you need to make sure you have prepared them. The readers need to have made the hard journey to this moment alongside your protagonist so that it feels as powerful to them as it does to the character. They need to understand how everything involved with this moment works so that, when the moment arrives, they are thinking, “Ah ha! Of course,” rather than “Say what now?” And they need to know exactly what hangs in the balance as this moment unfolds.
Echoing the Story Crosshairs Moment Much like building to the crosshairs, you also need to make sure everything that happens after the crosshairs moment is affected by the event. Everything in the book should be tied to this moment. It can’t be a temporary thing. And the aftermath needs to feel right for the kind of story you’re telling.
About the Book For more tips on developing crosshairs moments, check out Novel Shortcuts by Laura Whitcomb. Online Exclusive: Q&A With Novelist Laura Whitcomb Award-winning novelist Laura Whitcomb shares her insights into the writing life in this exclusive Q&A. Buy Novel Shortcuts Now! More From the publishers of Writer's Digest Great discounts and more from the Writer's Digest Shop Check out WritersMarket.com - Where & How To Sell What You Write The Best in Writing Instructions on the Web: WritersDigestUniversity.com |
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