Over the past weeks, I posted mini-series for character development. I hope writers and authors took at least one or two things away from my advice. If you are unsure of what I am referring to, you can look at the last post of the series, and there are links to the other posts there.
As for this post, I wanted to roll-on from your well-rounded protagonist, you need to build suspense for you readers to finish your story. Suspense is a wonderful tool to evoke a strong emotional response from readers. Below are Three Suggestions to Build Suspense In Your Novel.
Your reader wants to go with you to places they would never go on their own–far from the safety and comfort of their cozy bed or couch. Consider tweaking and adding the following elements to your story to develop suspense through each page and chapter.
Alter your setting.
Manipulate your settings for maximum discomfort. Something as innocuous as a children’s playground can become a spine-tingling nightmare if done right.
Benign setting: In a children’s playground, children laugh, the sun shines, moms in pink coats gossip at nearby picnic tables.
Suspense Upgrade: Fog rolls in, the playground clears out. Creaking empty swings glide back and forth in an unseen breeze, a small shoe–just one–left behind on the ground scream to the reader go home, right now!
But you don’t let the reader walk out of that playground. You give them the tour of all the goose-pimple-inducing sights. Then you whack them over the head with something unexpected because you have built the suspense.
Already have a creepy setting? Consider giving it an upgrade by turning up the fear-factor.
Spooky setting: Your setting is an old, dark mill filled with cobwebs and abandoned factory equipment.
Suspense Upgrade: Your setting is an old mill where children died 150 years ago in a tragic fire.
Alter your character’s actions.
You’ve heard the saying, Kill your darlings. Well, in this case, don’t kill them–before you torture the hell out of them. Keep throwing obstacles at them and then see how they react. There are three different possible outcomes for your character:
1. They rock the challenge but further their path to chaos.
Your character defeats a killer mermaid. Yay! Now the dead mermaid’s kinfolk seek revenge and actively pursue your main character and her family. Oh no. Suspense!
2. They sort of rock the challenge.
Your character discovers a secret, but the secret unravels them.
3. They fail. They fail miserably.
The main character breaks into a crypt to discover family secrets–then the door shuts behind her, locking her in.
Alter your pacing.
By varying the pacing in your story, you can build suspense.
Use misdirection to slow pace.
Use your god-like abilities as a world-builder to perform the shell game with your reader. Lead them in the wrong direction. Show them what they want to see, but leave tiny breadcrumbs of what’s to come. Then, reveal something unexpected. Be careful with this technique. Your reader won’t like it if you don’t play fair, so play fair. In the end, they should read the passage, get to the end and feel like, it doesn’t connect with the overall plot and story arc.
Build a crescendo
Have your action build slowly. You know where you want to go with your big reveal, but take your time getting there in the beginning. Allow the tension to build to a frenetic pace until the ultimate shock is revealed. Then end your chapter with a cliffhanger.
Switch storylines.
End one chapter with a cliffhanger, but don’t start the next chapter with the cliffhanger’s answer. Keep anxiety levels high by switching to a parallel storyline. You need to be masterful with this or you will irritate your audience.
George R. R. Martin’s Game of Thrones series is an excellent example of this technique. Martin switched between protagonists point of view, with a cliffhanger to switch to another characters arc.
Try a few of these techniques and see which ones work, and which ones drive your readers to switch on that extra light–you know, just in case. If this happens, you’ve arrived at suspense-building mastery.
If you have any more questions, make sure you post your questions, comments or/ and answers below. If you think someone has an interesting point of view, questions or an answer, please invite them or share this post with them.
#DouglasWTSmith #suspense
Some great advice here, Douglas. I am presently reviewing the role of my main character and this will be a good reference for me…
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Thank you. I’m glad you enjoyed the read and hopefully it does help you with your main characters.
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I’m sure it will…
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Reblogged this on anita dawes and jaye marie.
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Great tips, as always! Speaking of pacing, sentence length and tempo is a good way to set mood within a single scene.
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Thank you! Sentence length can have such an impact on the mood and suspense. Great suggestion.
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