Different folks
struggle with different stretches. We’d be gingerperson-cookies if this weren’t
so. But then, there are the life patches that we have in common and find challenging.
For many who write
stories, the middle is the hardest part.
I used to feel
alone in this until I began communicating with others. Some call it the muddling middle, which is just what
writers would do for such— conjuring a nice alliteration.
But why should the
middle of a story be so hard?
Part of it is the way
we train ourselves to come up with roaring bang-up first line/paragraphs. This
is essential to hook the reader/listener. Okay, Check. ✔
Then, there’s the matter of the ending. Pure pantsters (writing without
any plan by the seat of their pants) may find endings daunting. Most
storytellers know the beginning, the protagonist’s challenge, and (get ready
for this---) the end. Check.✔
The end is a bookend
to the beginning of the protagonist’s quest.
I heard John
Grisham respond to a question about writer’s block by saying he always knows
the ending before he even starts on a new novel, and so he must envision how to
get there and avoid the blocking bumps. Along that bumpy part, you must do everything
not to lose the passengers/ readers.
This brings up the
most challenging part: all that middle. The meat of the tale. The how to get
from the beginning to the end.
Beginnings and
endings take care of themselves. Middles don’t. Middles are the hardest part.
Oh yes, middles are hard for me too. I typically know the beginning and ending and the major sights along the way but I can still meander too much in the middle. I have to write a proper outline after I finish a draft to make sure everything's happening in a logical order. What a gift to have revisions!
ReplyDeleteI like the bookends.
ReplyDeleteLove,
Janie
And I like the books in the middle that the bookends hold :P
ReplyDeleteI felt this way too until I started writing mysteries. They have to have clues woven throughout and new discoveries, which I’ve found keep me fully interested throughout my drafts. It’s a welcome change.
ReplyDelete