by guest blogger, Linda S. Clare
Click here if you missed Writing 3-D Scenes, Part One
Three is a Good
Number.
Click here if you missed Writing 3-D Scenes, Part One
- How Long Is the Scene? A good scene moves along, doesn’t have a lot of pregnant pauses and if the writer needs a character to do something irritating, boring or repetitive, your job as the writer is to give the illusion of those things without making the reader suffer through a real example. So if a character is a small child who’s whining and begging, you might not include all the exchanges between the parent and child. Only write enough for the reader to get the idea. If you really irritate, bore or otherwise annoy the reader, they’ll tune out.