Writing is
always a tricky business. It’s the writer’s job to hook the reader without the
reader knowing he or she has been hooked. You want the reader to fall in, enjoy
the adventure and not be aware of you, the writer, or even the fact they’ve
been ‘away’ except for that golden afterglow of reading a truly great story.
So, with
that goal in mind, among many other facets is the writer’s ability to give the
reader reason to laugh and/or cry. Emotion is vital to keeping your reader
involved in your story – right readers?
One might
seem easier to accomplish than the other but they’re pretty much neck and neck
in my book.
Let’s make
them laugh.
Here’s the
thing. People are not all exactly alike, but we share a lot of triggers. What a
lot of people share, including agents and editors is a love of wit. And may I
add wit isn’t precisely humor. Lots of people get a laugh out of slapstick, you
know a fall on slippery ice or pie in the face. But that kind of humor doesn’t
really involve the brain, wit does. And to key in to wit we need to realize
surprise can cause laughter, absurdity too as well as understatement. All are
elements, tactics you can use to add wit to the story you’re writing. And your
characters are more likely sources for this than your plot.
Think
about characters like the bone-steeped archaeologist with his many degrees who
is socially inept. Or what about the
accountant so adept at guiding is clients but who can’t control his own
impulsive online spending. Or a CEO who diplomatically keeps peace in his
office, but has the war of the gardens going on at his semi-palatial home.
There are many
more – and lots more ways to put grins on readers faces. Think about it. Read other books or scripts
and think about what made you smile.
Want to
make them cry?
Yep, you
do. And here’s an even better point to be made. If you create an atmosphere
where readers laugh and cry reading the same book, they’re sure to remember it.
And if they remember it they’ll in all probability be looking for another book
with your name on it as author.
So, how to make them cry ~
No, don’t just have the family dog
die. It’s more than that. It’s that by which the reader is so wrapped up in the
story that they feel for the characters. Doesn’t matter whether it’s Bambi and
his mother just got killed by the hunters or whether it’s that homemaker who
while making a special birthday cake for her kid just found it fell flat in the
oven.
It’s emotional suspense, build up,
anxiety in anticipation, process and a final really great payoff.
To accomplish all that it can’t
happen quick. You can’t just toss in pathos.
As the writer you must take your
time whether you write fast and blast it onto the page, then rewrite or whether
you go slowly to begin with, what you write needs to build from a small, single
seed.
When thinking about this consider
your characters. Do you want to break a heart? Who among people are the most
vulnerable? Children? Romantics? Dreamers?
How about this. You have a war
veteran. He’s been working with a military dog – gone through hell with him.
They’ve been best friends and watched each other’s’ backs. He retires from the
service with his dog and they go camping. Somehow they’re separated.
Circumstances force the soldier to go, believing his friend dead – but he never stops thinking about the dog in
the wilderness – will they find each other again? Readers think the dog dead; but still they
hope.
Readers can be swept up in stories
that make them laugh and cry, not thinking about or even caring what it is
about that story that sweeps them along.
It’s up to you as the writer to find
those human links, the chords that resonate and to pluck them in a way that
touches the heart.
Hi, Peggy. How have you been? Hope you and yours are well. I just had the first beta to read my forthcoming Paranormal Romance tell me that she cried at the end. I must be on to something there, huh? *grins* I certainly hope so. Isn't it magical to have a book draw out those kinds of feelings out of readers?
ReplyDeleteTake care.
-Jimmy
http://jamesgarciajr.blogspot.com/
Hi Jimmy, thanks for the comment - yes, it IS magical to have a book bring out those feelings - or any writing endeavor. Best of luck with your new romance.
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