Don’t Leave Out the Good Stuff

by James Scott Bell
@jamesscottbell

It’s First Page Critique time. Here we go:

THE END OF THE SUMMER

TEN YEARS AGO

November. The rain started first thing that morning and Marc Newman listened to the fat drops splatter against the window panes. He sat at his desk, diddling with a pencil, watching the rain and ruminating. She was still on his mind. About nine-thirty the Sheriff and two deputies knocked on the front door. They were there to arrest him for murder. He had been expecting them for months.

He didn’t resist and didn’t say anything.

At the Sheriff’s office, Newman endured the fingerprinting, photographing his mug shot, and watching a deputy type up the arrest form. He was allowed to call his attorney, Harold deLuca.

That afternoon, he was taken from his cell to an interview room. A woman introduced herself as Assistant District Attorney Melonie Edgars.

He wondered why deLuca wasn’t there.  

She told Newman that he was being charged with the first degree murder of Lya Marie Reynolds. She wanted him to sign a paper indicating he understood his rights under Miranda v Arizona. He didn’t respond to her request.

“Mr. Newman, I’m here as a courtesy. We already have enough evidence on you to put in prison for the rest of your life. This is your chance to get your story on the record and that might help you during your trial. Tell me what happened on August 13th of this year.”

“I’d rather wait for my attorney to get here before I answer any of your questions.”

Edgars leaned back and sighed. “Guilty people always say that. Are you guilty of murder, Mr. Newman?”

He wanted to tell her to go screw herself but remained quiet instead.

“Did you know Lya Reynolds?”

He said nothing.

“She was only three weeks from her sixteenth birthday when you murdered her. Did you know that?   Her sweet sixteen. Turned out to be pretty bitter for her didn’t it.”

He looked away.

“Did you know she was pregnant when she was murdered?”

A tear rolled down Newman’s cheek. He didn’t try to wipe it away.

Edgars laid out several eight by ten glossy prints. “These were taken when we found her body. It was a vicious attack. Only someone who really hated her could have done this.   Look at them Mr. Newman. Look at what you did.”

“I . . . I, huh.” Newman gulped for air.   “I didn’t do this.”

“You’re a liar, Mr. Newman. And I can prove it.”

JSB: Writer, we have some work to do. Let’s roll up our sleeves.

Give Us the Good Stuff

There are two ways to render action on the page—scene and summary. A scene is showing us what’s happening in real time. Summary is telling us what happened.

In Stein on Writing, Sol Stein explains:

Narrative summary is the recounting of what happens offstage, out of the reader’s sight and hearing, a scene that is told rather than shown.

An immediate scene happens in front of the reader, is visible, and therefore filmable. That’s an important test. If you can’t film a scene, it is not immediate. Theatre, a truly durable art, consists almost entirely of immediate scenes.

Just as every form of writing that is expected to be read with pleasure moves away from abstraction, every form of pleasurable writing benefits from conveying as much as possible before the eye, onstage rather than offstage.

The first half of your submission is all summary. Summary does not grab or engage. In fact, it should only be used to transition from one scene to another. Let’s say a guy has to leave his house and drive to the office. Unless the character is going to get into an accident, get shot at, or find a snake in his car, just write: John stormed out of the house and drove to the office.

But when there’s real conflict, real purpose, do not summarize it. Here, you open with a fellow getting arrested, taken to the station, and booked. All that is fodder for suspense, tension, worry. But you can’t create any of that in summary form.

She told Newman that he was being charged with the first degree murder of Lya Marie Reynolds. She wanted him to sign a paper indicating he understood his rights under Miranda v Arizona. He didn’t respond to her request.

Again, summary. Give us the good stuff! Interrogation scenes, like courtroom scenes, carry conflict by definition. Show show show!

All that being said…an author with a strong narrative voice can open with summary, as in To Kill a Mockingbird (Harper Lee), or with description, as in The Time It Never Rained (Elmer Kelton). Just know it takes some real wordsmithing to pull that off in a way that draws readers in.

Research the Good Stuff

We’ve got a lot of work to do here. The scene is implausible and needs the help of an expert (see Terry’s recent post and the comments). When you write about legal procedure and courtrooms, you need to nail the details (which often differ depending on state and local settings).

Our trouble starts with this: Here’s a guy who is suspected of murdering a pregnant teenager. The DA has “enough evidence” to put him away. How is this guy not in the clink? If the DA is involved and the case is heading for trial, that means there’s been an arrest, a booking and an indictment.

So we have the booking, and he watches a deputy “type up” the arrest form. Even ten years ago I doubt typewriters were used for this. Everything is computerized. And they wouldn’t let the suspect sit there and watch. He’d be in a cell. If he wants to call his lawyer, there’s usually a phone in a semi-private area they’ll allow a suspect to use.

As to the questioning itself, no ADA is going to tell a defendant she’s there to help him with his trial. Indeed, this ADA would not be talking to Newman at all because he has not signed a Miranda waiver and he’s asked for his attorney to be present before questioning. And yet the ADA goes on with her interrogation. She should be disbarred.

Perhaps you are setting up a later court hearing where the statements are thrown out by a judge. Most readers aren’t going to buy that. After years of Law and Order and myriad other TV shows and movies, we are well aware of Miranda and its meaning.

Side note: Unfortunately, there is a legal clinker on every episode of Law and Order. Whenever the detectives slap on the bracelets they immediately advise, “You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say…” Etc.

Problem is, in real life police do not give Miranda at the point of arrest. Miranda only comes into play when they begin to interrogate the suspect. Indeed, if the suspect starts mouthing off or says something incriminating on the way to the station, those statements are admissible in court. The cops want them to talk.

The bad effect of this trope is that some readers will object if you write the scene correctly. I enjoyed this thriller, but the author makes a huge mistake. When the police arrest Alan they do not read him his rights! How can the author not know that? 

That’s why, in my thrillers, if someone’s arrested I include a line or two, or an internal thought explaining the actual procedure.

End of rant side note.

Write the Good Beats, Cut the Useless Ones

A useless beat is redundant and makes a sentence flabby:

He wanted to tell her to go screw herself but remained quiet instead.

“Did you know Lya Reynolds?”

He said nothing.

We don’t have to be told he remained quiet instead. It’s obvious from the action.

He wanted to tell her to go screw herself.

“Did you know Lya Reynolds?”

He said nothing.

Reads better, doesn’t it?

Further, emotional beats need to be woven into the fabric of the scene in a plausible fashion.

“She was only three weeks from her sixteenth birthday when you murdered her. Did you know that?   Her sweet sixteen. Turned out to be pretty bitter for her didn’t it.”

He looked away.

“Did you know she was pregnant when she was murdered?”

A tear rolled down Newman’s cheek. He didn’t try to wipe it away.

It’s much too sudden for a tear to roll. It’s only been seconds from He wanted to tell her to go screw herself. What we’re missing are the beats where the inner turmoil heats up enough to start the waterworks.

How you write this depends on what you’re doing with the character. Did he do it? Is he feeling remorse? Or is this human pity for a victim of foul play? Whatever the answer, we need more to justify whatever he’s feeling, especially when it’s the opposite of what he felt a few seconds ago.

One minor note: You’re using the old-school double space after a period. No longer done.

Assignments

  1. Rewrite this opening without any narrative summary. Present-moment scene only. Put the good stuff in.
  2. Do your research on arrests, criminal referrals, and in-custody interrogations.
  3. Read the first chapter of Michael Connelly’s The Last Coyote. Bosch is on involuntary stress leave and forced into a counseling session with a police psychologist. It’s twelve-pages long. That’s how it’s done.

Let’s help the writer out further in the comments.

7 thoughts on “Don’t Leave Out the Good Stuff

  1. Brave writer, I agree with JSB’s assessment. Whether the POV character is guilty or innocent, this scene misses out on a lot of potential tension because it is summarized rather than shown. And comes across as emotionless save for the tear — which appears too little, too late to rope the reader in.

    The one curiosity point that you did raise for me is the desire to know more about the importance of the “TEN YEARS AGO” header–I am very curious to know what it is about this situation that makes it carry forward ten years later. With a re-write in a showing not telling format, I’d be curious to read on and find out.

  2. I also find the narrative abrupt–a lot of short declarative sentences. That might be a stylistic choice, and if so, just disregard. : )

  3. Thanks for the shout out, JSB.
    Brave Author, listen to his advice. He knows his writing stuff and the legal stuff.
    I agree with BK. If this is a “prologue” it needs to be compelling to make a reader want to know what’s going to happen ten years in the future. We have to care about your protagonist. Get us deeper into his head.

  4. Good morning, Brave Author. I also agree with JSB’s comments and advice. Your story will become more immersive and immediate. I also agree with BK and Terry if this is a prologue it needs to be more compelling and engaging, and again JSB’s advice will help with that. You certainly have the material here for a dramatic scene.

    Side note: I worked for a local county government for thirty years (library department) and desktop computers were connected to the internet and being extensively used to write incident reports, track schedules, managed discard lists etc by the later 1990s.

    Good luck with your submission. Take heart and consider the advice offered here to help your story be the best it can be.

  5. Jim, as always, nails the issues. Summarizing instead of dramatizing, as well as lack of characterization and emotion. W/o knowing something about Marc Newman, he’s hard to care about.

    I suggest deleting the weather which isn’t important and instead start with these lines:

    “About nine-thirty the Sheriff and two deputies knocked on Marc Newman’s front door. They were there to arrest him for murder. He had been expecting them for months.”

    Give the reader a hint of his inner thoughts: is he relieved? Resigned? Indignant? Defensive? Does he flashback to the girl’s face and/or body? Even though he controls his visible reaction, he has to be feeling something inside.

    I like the premise of a guy who’s known for months he’s going to be arrested. That’s a compelling setup that makes me want to read more to find out what happened and why he hasn’t already been arrested. Brave Author, make the reader care about the character and you’ll have a winning start. Best of luck!

  6. Thanks for this submission, Brave Author! There’s a kernel of a story that I would like to read.

    Take to heart JSB’s critique and your story will shine. Especially the part about opening with moment-by-moment action, either external or internal.

    He sat at his desk, diddling with a pencil, watching the rain and ruminating. You don’t want to open a thriller/crime novel with this kind of sentence.

    Maybe consider the opening scene at a different spot in the story…like the actual murder of the victim.

  7. Brave writer, thanks for sharing your work so that others may learn from it. I agree with everything JSB said about scene and summary. There is a very good book that I think you might enjoy called GMC: Goal, Motivation, and Conflict:The Building Blocks of Good Fiction by Debra Dixon. There’s a kindle version available. You want to begin your book with a scene, not summary. Are you sure you want to begin your story with something that happened ten years ago? You can always find a creative way to introduce the backstory later. Instead, consider beginning your story with something happening in the present of your story. Find a way to introduce your main character in a way that it is interesting and tells the reader something about his personality. Perhaps your main character got punished for a murder he didn’t commit ten years ago, but the reader doesn’t need that summarized in the beginning. Begin with a scene that has something interesting happening that highlights your main character’s personality and introduces the story problem. Then you can let the reader know about his past and how he is influenced by it a bit at a time. For a good discussion of where to start your story, check out the book Scene & Structure by Jack Bickham, which you can read at the Open Library at archive.org online, I believe. Good luck, brave writer. There are so many aspects of writing, and I don’t want to overwhelm you right now. Keep going with your story. I want to know more. Keep going!

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