
We all have preferences for flow in a story. Let’s see what everyone thinks:
- What do you think is a good tool for creating seamless breaks in a story?
- What sport would you compare writing to in terms of maintaining flow of action?
- What is some advice you would give an author to help them maintain story flow?
About Charles Yallowitz
Charles E. Yallowitz was born, raised, and educated in New York. Then he spent a few years in Florida, realized his fear of alligators, and moved back to the Empire State. When he isn't working hard on his epic fantasy stories, Charles can be found cooking or going on whatever adventure his son has planned for the day. 'Legends of Windemere' is his first series, but it certainly won't be his last.
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It’s funny, but a live hockey game is what made me do this topic. So many stops that I couldn’t figure out the reason for.
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I remember you mentioning you went to the Islanders game. So hockey is a natural fit.
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I like the idea of having mini cliff hangers. The reader gets a reason to continue and it halps the flow. Also with major tme shifts I like the * * * method of letting the reader know about the passage of time.
I think basketball is a perfect analogy to maintaining flow. The excitement is there until someone makes a foul. Then to get back to excitement can take a while during the free throw process.
My advice for flow is to think of the story as a movie. In a movie you would never have scenes where nothing is accomplished.
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Basketball makes some sense. It’s fairly quick in action with minimal pauses compared to other sports. Not to mention it goes back and forth, so it definitely works for battles.
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I think so too.
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Ugh! This is one of my great struggles. I’m not really into sports anymore either, so I’m hear to learn.
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Hope the posts helped.
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I like the third answer. Many people don’t consider a pov switch.
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