CONTENTMENT COTTAGE

WELCOME! In the midst of each life's chaos exists a place of calm and sunshine. I call mine Contentment Cottage. It is the place where I write my stories and find the peace of God. I've posted my "Ice Pick" reviews and will continue to add some of what I call my "Ice Crystals": poems, articles, essays, fillers, and recipes.

Monday, October 23, 2006

THE ICE PICK

Scene and Structure, by Jack M. Bickham. Cincinnati, Writer’s Digest Books, 1999. Paperback ed. (The Elements of Fiction Writing) Includes index and appendices. ISBN 0-89879-906-6. $12.00.

Unlike most how-to-write books, this one emphasizes the actual framework of story writing, answering the "how do you get there from here?" and "what do I do next?" kinds of tactical planning questions.

If you want to learn how to construct a short story or a novel, this book can tell you how to build it scene by scene with clarity, flow, logic, readability, and rhythm.

Bickham explains basics like starting and ending a story, deciding how long the individual scenes and the story itself should be and whether or not to include subplots, plus more advanced concepts such as: linking your scenes through transition and sequel, handling scenes started by non-viewpoint characters, flashbacks, and all-dialogue or all-action scenes.

He teaches fiction’s classic structural patterns and says that a thorough understanding and use of them "frees the writer from having to worry about the wrong things, and allows her to concentrate her imagination on characters and events rather than on such stuff as transitions and moving characters around, when to begin or open a chapter, whether there ought to be a flashback, and so on."

You probably noticed the use of the word "her" in the above quotation. Bickham used feminine pronouns throughout the book to refer to writers and masculine pronouns to refer to readers, a quirk that I found very distracting (I kept looking back to see whom he was referring to) and very annoying (as if women were the only ones who had writing problems).

That fairly minor complaint aside, this book is a treasure. It shows how cause and effect underlie the structure of fiction and how you can use this to create everything from your story’s master plot to all of your individual scenes through statements of your character’s goal(s), introduction and development of conflicts, and the tactical disasters (for your character) that should end each scene and drive your story forward.

There are chapters on using tricks to control the pace of your story, how to fix common errors in scenes, and plotting. He even has a chapter on chapter structure, covering such things as how long a chapter should be and whether or not chapters should coincide with scenes.

He gives you ideas, like using 3x5 cards to keep track of your character’s goal in each scene and using colored pencils to help you maintain control over complicated scenes.

The index is excellent, and appendices contain excerpts from published works showing what is explained in the text. This is not an easy book, but I highly recommend it for serious writers.

{Published in GPIC, the Oklahoma Science Fiction Writers Newsletter. May 1999. Reprinted in SF & Fantasy Workshop Newsletter, Nov. 2004.}

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