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A
non-driver never learns to shift gears without thought, do they? No-one
can teach you how to drive without thinking, in that second-nature way,
to where you've been a hundred times. Story flow is the same. You have
to know the bends and corners - the turning points of your book, and
connect them to the theme, the romance, the depth of the relationship,
until it¹s second nature, and you do it without thought, knowing
instinctively where it isn't flowing and working on it.
In a
recent a workshop, Fiona Brand said "to crystallize your
story—put it in one sentence. And connect your whole book to that one
sentence." I agree completely, but while working on story flow, I
try to go one step further and say, add your turning points—but never
more than two. Find your two biggest growth moments for the hero and
heroine. If you connect these two together and make them completely
central to the theme, plot and especially the developing romance, the
book will flow.
In my
latest book, the theme was that both hero and heroine wear masks: one
physically, one emotionally, and both had to learn to leave them behind
and accept themselves exactly as they are. The sexuality, the danger,
the spying, was all secondary to this one intrinsic truth. I knew what I
wanted to say. The two turning points were her telling him about her
having been raped by a deranged fan three years before, and his telling
her that she was running from the past - not just from the rape, but her
childhood abuse by the people in their hometown. In essence, in becoming
famous and re-inventing herself as "the Iceberg", she now wore
a mask, just as he did. But hers was emotional, where his was physical,
used for the safety of the mission they've been sent on together. At the
end of the mission, he took his physical mask off, willing to face the
world as he was, imperfect; she had to let her emotional mask go, let go
of Verity West the Iceberg, and learn to be herself, Mary-Anne, again.
The theme
and plot and relationship, the romance and sexuality, the danger and
action, even their interaction with others, all had to hinge on this. It
had to be everywhere, leading up slowly, building to these two pivotal
moments. I kept them in the front of my mind throughout the book, and
so, even though this book was the hardest I've ever written, the book
flowed, because my theme and turning points were always there in front
of me. And when I knew something was missing (besides the 10,000 words
it came in short!), I thought again of these turning points, Fiona's
words, and I knew what was missing. And the new scene flowed into the
rest of the book.
So if
you're having trouble making your story flow, find your one theme. Put
it in that one sentence, as Fiona says. Find your turning points, your
two critical points that make your book unique. Write them down, and
keep it in front of you as you write every sentence, every scene, every
chapter. When the book's that simple, in that one perspective, all else
will flow. It's hard work to start with, but it's well worth it. It's
second nature to me now.
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