Reading & Ranting - by Debbie Bennett
So I’m reading and ranting again. This
one shall remain nameless – and actually I finished it last night and already I
can’t remember the title or the author. That’s how memorable the story was. A trad-published
book, too, which surprised me.
So why am I ranting? Because it’s the
second book I’ve read in as many weeks with exactly the same two ‘faults’ – in my
opinion, of course. The lack of cause-and-effect and the inappropriate
dissolution of tension.
Let’s take the first one. Our unlikely
and unreliable narrator (this trend is so fashionable right now, it hurts – and
unless it’s done really well, it’s
largely ineffective …) heroine is caught doing things she shouldn’t. She’s
trapped, together with a couple of young girls and the bad guys are pissed-off
and about to do Unspeakable Things. But we never know or see these Unspeakable
Things, because – guess what? – the chapter ends and suddenly our heroine is
free and wakes up in hospital! What?
Cause and effect. Rule number whatever
in the writer’s handbook. Thy protagonist
shall escape thy antagonist by reasons of his own doings. Or more basically
– our heroine needs to escape the bad guys herself
and not because of something somebody else has or hasn’t done. No deus ex machina for me, thank you very
much, and I don’t much like the white knight in shining armour either. In this
case, apparently one of the teenage girls snuck out and called the police. It’s
not really cricket, is it?
It’s something I try very hard not to
do myself in my books. Sometimes it takes me ages to figure out how my
characters are going to get out of whatever predicament I’ve dumped them in
this time, but they always do it themselves by using their initiative or
because of something they’ve already done or not done – and not because of
something happening off-screen.
What about the inappropriate
dissolution of tension? I’m guilty as sin of that, as my editor will love to
point out. He always picks me up when I spend ages building tension in a
chapter and then let it go like a rubber band snapping. I can see it when he
points it out. So our next heroine (who again spends most of the novel
wandering around uncertainly and not knowing who to believe) is again trapped.
Stuck in her husband’s ex-wife’s house, pregnant, and locked in a small room,
she’s scared for her life and the life of her baby. Ex-wifey or even hubby may
or may not already be a murderer … So let’s build the tension as she searches
for a way out before she falls asleep until hubby arrives and in a few lines
she hits him on the head.
And then ... and then … we’re in a new chapter nine months later. Baby born,
everything now pink and fluffy and we get the what actually happened bit related to us retrospectively. Told not
shown. Elastic bands pinging all over the place as the tension has sprung
somewhere off-planet.
Maybe it’s me. I like a novel to be a
satisfying experience. I like something to happen to our hero or heroine and I
like them to deal with it themselves and come out the other end changed in some
way. Is that too much to ask? Am I reading the wrong novels? Maybe I need to
get back to writing them instead.
Comments