
By PJ Parrish
Decisions, decisions…
We make thousands of them every day, and they run the gamut from the semi-conscious to the life-altering. Get up or hit the snooze button? Walk the dog now or hope he makes it until I get home? Buy or rent? Call up the ex-wife and tell her the truth? Send my son to rehab? Confront mom about giving up her car keys?
Since this process is part of our everyday life, you’d think making decisions would be rote when it comes to our writing. But it’s not. Just ask any poor slob who has painted himself into the plot corner and said, “Oh crap, now what?”
Was thinking about this a lot because I am critiquing a manuscript. I am doing this for a friend who is stuck, about a third of the way through, and asked me to take a look. Normally, I don’t do this for friends because I don’t have enough of them and didn’t want to lose this one. But he had some sucess with traditional publishing years ago, lost his contract, and was now going the self-pubbing route. And without an editor, he had wandered off his path.
Well, I read his stuff. It wasn’t bad. He’s got a solid grip on craft. But for the life of me, and despite doing countless First Page Critiques here, I couldn’t figure out what was wrong. Like him, I was stuck. So I asked him to be patient and set his manuscript aside. I came back to it with a fresh eye two weeks later, and it hit me immediately — he had not made enough decisions.
Here’s a quote from an essay about decision making from the writer Amos Oz. I had to run down some internet rabbit holes to find it because it is THIRTY years old! But when I re-read it, it feels as fresh as the first day I read it. (Click here if you want to read the whole essay in Paris Review). Money quote:
[Writing] is like reconstructing the whole of Paris from Lego bricks. It’s about three-quarters-of-a-million small decisions. It’s not about who will live and who will die and who will go to bed with whom. Those are the easy ones. It’s about choosing adjectives and adverbs and punctuation. These are molecular decisions that you have to take and nobody will appreciate, for the same reason that nobody ever pays attention to a single note in a symphony in a concert hall, except when the note is false. So you have to work every hard in order for your readers not to note a single false note. That is the business of three-quarters-of-a-million decisions.
Isn’t that great? A good novel is made by careful and calculated decision-making. Not that there isn’t room for serendipity, flights of fancy, and raw passion. Yes, characters take on a life of their own, but we still hold their reins. Yes, we can’t anticipate every detour, but we can keep the car under fifty as we career down the road less written about.
Back to my lost friend. Like I said, there was some good stuff happening in his story. But he wasn’t in control of his decisions. He was like a guy thrown into a swift-moving river and had left his fate to the rapids and rocks instead of making an effort to steer toward a goal.
Years ago, I went on a white-water rafting trip on the Nantahala River (where part of Deliverance was filmed. That’s me middle right in the picture above). It was white-knuckle stuff, but I always had faith that our guide could get us through. He knew where the rocks and whirlpools were, when we needed to pull right, or when we needed to ford a bad stretch. He made decisions.
Okay, enough with the metaphors. I’ll give you some rocks to grab onto. Here are some of the biggest decisions you have to make:
1. Where do I start?
We crime dogs get drilled into us that a fast break from the gate is vital to mystery and thrillers. I believe you can risk a slow opening if it is well done, but I also believe that your POINT OF ENTRY is the single most important decision you make. Yes, the opening must be compelling and hint at what’s to come. But enter too early and you risk throat-clearing. (Detective awakened by phone call in night summoning him to crime scene.). Too late and you risk confusion. (What the heck is going on here? Who are these people? Where am I in time and place?).
Let’s take a look at one opening. It’s a little long but worth dissecting:
Dawn broke over Peachtree Street. The sun razored open the downtown corridor, slicing past the construction cranes waiting to dip into the earth and pull up skyscrapers, hotels, convention centers. Frost spiderwebbed across the parks. Fog drifted through the streets. Trees slowly straightened their spines. The wet, ripe meat of the city lurched toward the November light.
The only sound was footsteps. Heavy slaps echoed between the buildings as Jimmy Lawson’s police-issue boots pounded the pavement. Sweat poured from his skin. His left knee wanted to give. His body was a symphony of pain. Every muscle was a plucked piano wire. His teeth gritted like a sand block. His heart was a snare drum. The black granite Equitable Building cast a square shadow as he crossed Pryor Street. How many blocks had Jimmy gone? How many more did he have to go?
Don Wesley was thrown over his shoulder like a sack of flour. Fire-man’s carry. Harder than it looked. Jimmy’s shoulder was ablaze. His spine drilled into his tailbone. His arm trembled from the effort of keeping Don’s legs clamped to his chest. The man could already be dead. He wasn’t moving. His head tapped into the small of Jimmy’s back as he barreled down Edgewood faster than he’d ever carried the ball down the field. He didn’t know if it was Don’s blood or his own sweat that was rolling down the back of his legs, pooling into his boots.
He wouldn’t survive this. There was no way a man could survive this.
This is from Karin Slaughter’s Cop Town. Why do I like this opening? Because even though she uses a lot of description, the effect is visceral and immediate. She could have started with the shooting incident itself, but haven’t we all read that a million times? No, she dives into the bleeding heart of the scene by showing a cop carrying his dying partner. What is left UNSAID is compelling and makes us want to read on: What happened? Why didn’t he just get in his squad car and drive? Where is he going? Are both men shot? Turns out, Jimmy carries his partner to the hospital but does he survive?
2. Whose story is this?
Every story needs a protagonist. Duh. But sometimes, in the hurly-burly of writing, we can lose sight of who owns the story. The result can be that seductive secondary characters take over, or the villain becomes hyper-vivid. The protag-hero is, to my mind, the hardest character to create because you must invest so much of the story’s logic and impact in them that they can mutate from calm center to sidelined cipher.
Sometimes, you might start out telling the story from one character’s POV, believing he is your hero, but then a second character elbows into the spotlight. This happened to our book She’s Not There. I opened with a woman waking up in a hospital with concussion-induced amnesia and she has a gut-punch fear that her husband tried to kill her. So she bolts from the hospital and goes on the run. She’s my unreliable narrator protag, I thought. Until her husband hires a skip tracer to bring her home. It took fifty-some pages before I realized I had a full-scale dual-protag story on my hands. And I had to do a lot of rewriting to make it work.
Now this is not to say you can’t have a teeming cast in your story. Take Ken Follett’s The Pillars of the Earth. I was captivated by the protag Tom Builder, but whenever Follett moved away from Tom, I got impatient. Later in this massive book, the protag spotlight shifts to his step-son Jack. I missed Tom badly.
And be careful about setting up a false or “decoy” protag. This is a character that dominates so much of a book in its early going, that the reader begins to identify with her and invest in her journey. But then this character is marginalized (usually killed). Think of Marion Crane in Psycho, who dominated the movie for 47 minutes until Norman Bates became the putative protag. Stieg Larsson’s Mikael Blomkvist is a decoy protag, I think, because while most the plot’s machinery is built around him, Lizabeth Salander is the true action hero and embodiment of the story’s themes. At the very least, I’d consider them dual protags.
3. What am I trying to say?
I’m going out on limb here and say all good books have themes. Yes, your goal might be modest — you just want to entertain readers. But beneath the grinding gears of plot, even light books can have something to say about the human condition. A romance might be “about” how love is doomed without trust. A courtroom drama might be “about” the morality of the death penalty. Good fiction, Stephen King says, “always begins with story and progresses to theme.” And often, you don’t even grasp the theme until later in the book or even during rewrites.
What are your major and minor conflicts? What is the book’s theme(s)? What are the recurring visual motifs or symbols? What is the book’s tone and mood? Which leads me to…
4. What mood am I in?
When She’s Not There was in the Thomas & Mercer pipeline, my editor sent me a questionnaire listed some “mood” words — haunting, witty, intense, sweet, hopeful, psychological, somber, epic, tragic, foreboding, romantic. They were asking us this because they wanted the design and promotion to enhance our chances of marketing success. You, too, have to think about this as you write your book, whether you self-pub or go traditional. What kind of world are you asking your reader to enter? How do you want them to feel? Once you can answer this question, you then must use all your powers and craft to create what Edgar Allan Poe called “Unity of Effect.” Every word and image, Poe believed, had to be carefully chosen to illicit an emotion.
5. Where am I?
I’m often surprised at how paltry setting is rendered in crime fiction. We need to know where we are very early in the story, preferably inserted gracefully into the narrative flow via sharp description. Yeah, you can slap one of those tags at the beginning of chapter one — Somewhere in the Gobi Desert, Sept, 1904. I concede that you need sign-posts at times; I’ve used them myself. But they can be a crutch. As a reader, I prefer to be parachuted into a place and use my senses rather than have the writer stick a sign in my face.
6. Am I doing this for me or for the story?
The story always has to come first. You can’t kill someone off just because you’ve stalled in the middle and you’re desperate. You can’t let a character hog the story just because you’ve fallen in love with her or she’s easier to write than your protag. You can’t add a twist just because you think it will make you look clever. All twists must be organic, emerging from the plot, not from your “hey-watch-this!” writer-ego. Go back to question 2: Whose story it is? Well, it’s not yours; it’s your character’s. It’s not about you using fancy words or filigreed metaphors. It’s not about you trying to transcend the genre, win some award, or anything else. It’s about the people in your book.
As Elmore Leonard said, “Always write from a character’s point of view. Write in their language to keep the sense that it’s their story. They’re the most important thing.”
7. Does this make sense?
This is just a plea for simple clarity in three things: your writing style, plot structure, and character motivation. Let’s break them down:
Writing style: Don’t confuse your readers. Chose the simplest but most evocative words you can find. As Stephen King says, “One of the really bad things you can do to your writing is dressing up the vocabulary, looking for long words because maybe you’re a little ashamed of your short ones.” In other words, most the time a lawn is just a lawn, not a verdant sward. Be clear in your choreography when you move your characters through time and space. If someone enters a room, tell us. If you jump ahead three days in time, tell us. This is the “busy work” of fiction writing but it’s no less important. If your reader can’t follow the simple physical movements in your story, they will give up on you and your book.
Plot structure: Your story must have a durable thread of logic that runs from beginning to end. Events on your plot arc must emerge organically and not from coincidence. (no deus ex machina or long-lost Uncle Dickie from Australia showing up in chapter 40 to announce he is the killer) Your details of police, legal and medical procedure must ring true. Your twists and turns must be well-planned and hard-earned. Does the plot, as a whole, make sense? And if you write sci-fi, dystopian fiction, fantasy or horror, does the artificial world you create obey the rules of its own logic and does it FEEL believable?
Character motivation: Man, is this one important. I can’t believe I left it for last. Characters are your lifeblood and if you want the reader to believe in them, to care about them, to root against them or cheer for them, they must be multi-dimensional and “real.” They must conform to their own internal logic. They must be true to their personalities. We’ve all read books where we say, “Shoot, that guy would have never done that!” The writer has not done her job in this case, has not asked herself: “Does this make sense for this person to do this?”
Decisions, decisions…
So what about my friend’s book? First, he had allowed a secondary character (A sidekick) to steal the spotlight. I advised him to go read some Robert B. Parker books to see how Parker kept the titanic yet taciturn sidekick Hawk under control. My friend also didn’t quite know what he was trying to SAY with his book. He is trying to transition from police procedurals to softer suspense (actually trying to catch the cozy-fantasy trend that’s hot right now). I suggested to him that he was relying too much on his darker neo-noir habits. The mood was inconsistent, even a tad tone-deaf.
As Amos Oz said nobody ever pays attention to a single note in a symphony, except when the note is false..
Perfect post for me this morning. I’ve started a new series and I’m a pantser. I’m aiming for something like the Thursday Murder Club, or Spy Coast. I want kick-ass 60-something people solving crimes. I have a team of women in another series and figured out how to make one the leader. I’m struggling with this new series in how to introduce characters and figure out who is the leader. I actually didn’t want a leader, but I’m not sure the story will work without one as I hate books that flip POV constantly. So I have all kinds of decisions to make to have this story work. Sigh. Why doesn’t the writing get easier after 28 books?
Funny you should mention your 60-something group today Alec. Years and years ago I tried to start a similar series about women of a certain age who travel together and find romance. (This was in my romance writing days). I was sure I was onto something juicy. But I had FIVE protags and I couldn’t control them. And way back then, I didn’t have the craft chops to handle multiple POVs esepcially when they were all yakking at once. I found the partial manuscript the other day in an old D drive. And yes, it was as bad as I remembered.
Oh no! At least I’m on alert early to fix this problem before my characters get out of hand and wreck the story, lol.
Thanks, PJ, for actionable tips designed to keep us from majoring in the minors.
Nice turn of phrase.
Great stuff, Kris. Packed with practicality. I track with the Oz quote about the wrong note. I use a similar metaphor–speed bumps. Learning to eliminate those involves a lot of decisions that to be in a writer’s muscle memory, which only comes through long experience. So keep writing, everyone.
What happens along the craft road, I think, is that at some point, you begin to recognize what you don’t know. And you try to get smarter. But it never gets easier. And like all good dancers and athletes, the basics of good craft eventually become part of what you call writer’s muscle memory.
“It’s about three-quarters-of-a-million small decisions.” This statement about writing sums it up perfectly.
In the last 2 weeks or so I pulled out & dusted off a first draft manuscript I wrote several years ago to read through & begin revising. And as I did & realized the number of hard decisions I’d have to make, it’s definitely right up there with that ‘three quarters of a million’ number. Not only things like you’ve described in this post, but I’m going to have to make some decisions about genre/market that I’m aiming for because I can’t have it both ways. All tough decisions. But it’ll all be worth it when it’s done.
My co-author sister Kelly and I are so unlike in life and writing habits. I am very decisive. I’m often wrong and have to recalibrate, but I jump off the cliff and go for it. Kelly is just the opposite — cautious and worried she’ll mess up. To which I always tell her, that is what divorce lawyers and delete buttons are for.
Amazing post, Kris! So much wisdom, explained clearly.
“Filigreed metaphors” is an example of beautiful, artful phrasing that at the same time pokes fun at writers who allow their egos to intrude in the writing. Love it!
It’s a tad ostentatious and showy but I couldn’t delete it. 🙂
Thoughtful, provocative, informative.
I’m starting a new book, and the decision making is slowing things down. I’m 5 chapters in, but have written/tweaked/rewritten the first three more times that I want to count. Since (I’m pretty sure) it’ll be another romantic suspense, I’m dealing with dual protagonists.
Will come back to this post, probably numerous times.
I really liked doing the dual protags — once I realized I had them. But it did take a lot of work and the book was, at first, out of control. It is not something any writer should attempt unless they’ve got some experience, imho. Good luck. Keep us posted on it.
Excellent. Am sharing with my critique group.
Aw, thanks Carol. Nice compliment.
Wow. Thanks for this masterful post, Kris.
I’m about halfway through the first draft of my WIP. I’ve made the big decisions (the protag, the supporting cast, the arc of the plot, the theme,) but I know many of the “three-quarters-of-a-million small decisions” will be made in the next draft(s). I’m bookmarking this post to come back to.
Love the picture. I hope my readers will feel like the folks in the raft.
Fantastic post, Kris. Decisions are key, and you give us extremely useful advice.
Sticking to particular plot/character/setting/motivation decisions is something I’ve struggled with in the past. Sometimes, a new take on a character, or a new character, plot point, or motivation, which pops up in draft, is exactly the right thing to do, but then you need to go back and make darn sure those new decisions become so from the get go.
Analysis paralysis on deciding between story choices. I was in the middle of my third Empowered novel, “Outlaw,” when I attended Don Maass’s Emotional Craft of Fiction workshop back in 2017 and brought up a crucial late second act plot decision–the problem was, I had like three different ways these could go, and all seemed good. Don’s advice was, if they all work, then decide to go with the one that resonates the strongest with you and run with that. BINGO. Indecision about making a decision solved.
Analysis paralysis. Love that. Am going to pass that along to my lost friend. He tends to overthink every plot point and he ends up with too many briain lint ideas cluttering up what should be his main linear plot line.
Great post, Kris. “Don’t confuse your readers. Chose the simplest but most evocative words you can find.”
When I first started writing my then-husband read my work and would comment: “Why did you use a dollar word here when a fifty-cent one would be better?” So I learned pretty quickly to look for simple but defining words.
I’ll return to this often as I work on my current WIP…
Sometimes grass is just grass. Not a verdant sward. I had to work hard to come up with that. 🙂 Writing badly on purpose is fun.