Rhythm, Pace, and Poe – Part III

Be A NovelistI very seldom do a three-part blog series, but sometimes when you get to writing (or teaching), things just happen. That certainly has happened with this blog that I’ve entitled Rhythm, Pace, and Poe.  If you missed them, you’ll want to check out Part I, and Part II.

The Well-Crafted Novel is Evenly Paced

When looking at the overarching experience of creating a novel, it becomes like one huge orchestral piece.  Everything hinges on how it is paced – the ebb and flow of action segments interspersed with more sedate scenes.  The well-crafted novel will be evenly paced.  Controlled. Measured.

Beginning novelists often play their hand (reveal amateur traits) by bunching too much in one place.  Giving too much away on the one hand, or withholding vital clues and information on the other. This tells you right away that the pacing is off.

No Scene is an Island

Be A NovelistPacing is knowing when to use narrative; when to use dialogue. When to use a power-punch action scene, when to let the reader pause and take a breath.  No scene is an island. All is integrated. Each scene must be measured against an entire novel.  Taking the long view (or the wide view, whichever), is how you will determine what goes where, when, and how much!

Everything about a novel is a mystery.  Readers keep reading for one reason and one reason only: to find out what happens next.  As the author you are playing out that story thread wisely, conservatively, cautiously.

Bunching, as I mentioned earlier, can be a writer who is eager to weave in slam-bang action scenes, but in his over-eager state he creates two or three high-powered action scenes back to back.  This happens when the author is unaware that slow-paced scenes are often as compelling as the slam-bang scenes; and when well-crafted, can hold reader attention every bit as intensely as scenes of high drama.

Crises

All stories need crises.  This is when tension erupts and conflict abounds – the point in the story when things “come to a head.” Rather like a volcano that’s been building steam and then finally blows.  Again, as with action scenes, pacing will be crucial. Creating crisis on top of crisis, instead of building interest, becomes hum-drum and boring to the reader. Space out the crises so as to build up to one, let it play out, drift for a bit, then build to the next.

The author’s eye senses how the pace is flowing.  Ever watching to focus on how story segments are fitting with other story segments so there is no unnatural bunching.

Pacing Within Scenes

Rhythm, tone, and pacing within scenes is achieved by using various means.  For instance, short pithy sentences intensify and speed up the pace.  These work great in scenes affecting high drama.

Long, soft sentences slow the pace and create  a more sedate tone of a subdued scene.

Likewise, pay attention to hard and soft consonant sounds.  An entire study is built around fricatives and plosives with regard to consonants.  While this body of knowledge is used especially in speech therapy, it can be equally useful to the writer who cares about rhythm of words.

For instance the voiceless fricatives such as wh, f, s, sh, j, and th (as in breath) can give the impression of breezes in the trees, or waves on the shore.

Without this understanding, one might play the alliteration game almost blindly without maximizing it to the full effect.

While I’m not saying you need to get a degree in speech therapy, I am saying that a token understanding of how consonant sounds affect the rhythm of a sentence can greatly enhance your writing.

Bells

The consonant b is a voiced plosive which conveys rough bluntness.  The consonant t is a voiceless plosive that creates staccato-type excitement.  When I think of these, my mind immediately goes to Poe’s poem Bells that I mentioned in Rhythm, Pace, and Poe – Part I.

Here’s the first verse of that poem:

Be A NovelistHear the sledges with the bells—
Silver bells!
What a world of merriment their melody foretells!
How they tinkle, tinkle, tinkle,
In the icy air of night!
While the stars that oversprinkle
All the heavens, seem to twinkle
With a crystalline delight;
Keeping time, time, time,
In a sort of Runic rhyme,
To the tintinnabulation that so musically wells
From the bells, bells, bells, bells,
Bells, bells, bells—
From the jingling and the tinkling of the bells.

Believe me when I say there could be Parts IV, V, and VI and more when teaching on this subject.   It’s all so very fascinating. But then to me, all facets of novel writing are fascinating!

Be A Novelist

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Rhythm, Pace, and Poe – Part II

Training My Inner Ear

Be A NovelistIn Rhythm, Pace, and Poe – Part I, I shared how my high school English teacher, Mr. Thomas, spent many hours reading poetry aloud to our class.  Even though I believe he did this simply because he preferred the easy way out (it’s easier to read poetry aloud than to teach grammar), I’m to this day indebted to that man. He was key in training my inner ear, my soul, and my emotions to delight in the rhythm of words.  I was quite fascinated.

While he read to us a wide variety of poetry, I came to admire Edgar Allan Poe. While I was never a fan of Poe’s personal lifestyle, I couldn’t argue that he was an amazing poet.

Deep PurpleBe A Novelist

It was also during my high school years that I first heard this line from an old rhythm and blues song:

When the deep purple falls over sleepy garden walls…

My young senses could hardly contain the beauty that I perceived in that one short line. One could definitely think of dusk as being a purple time of day – but it’s not just purple – it’s deep purple.  And that deep purple is falling.  Hm. That purpling of the evening was falling over the garden walls.  And not just a plain old garden wall, but a sleepy garden wall.  Can a garden wall be sleepy? Of course it can!

(As someone who was mesmerized with The Secret Garden in sixth grade  which was all about a walled garden, it was enough to set me into orbit.  [See my blog post entitled Books That Transform])

A Fresh Hunger to Write

I can remember mulling that line over and over in my mind. It amazed me that anyone could even think up a sentence so brimming over with imagery and beauty. Such lyric writing (poetry, actually) stirred up a fresh hunger in me to write.

It wasn’t that I thought I would ever write such a beautiful line – that wasn’t the point.  It’s more like being physically hungry and catching the whiff of dinner cooking in the kitchen. The appetite is suddenly intensified.  My hunger to write was intensified by such a lovely song.

The first stanza in its entirety goes like this:

When the deep purple falls over sleepy garden walls
and the stars begin to flicker in the sky
thru the mist of a memory
you wander back to me
breathing my name with a sigh.  (Mitchell Parish)

Take a Memory Journey

Each one of us who are compelled to write can take a memory journey and recall how the art of putting words on paper first beckoned us.  And how rhythm and pacing became real to us.  For me, I can definitely look back and see the mile-markers of

  • The Secret Garden,
  • Mr. Thomas reading Edgar Allen Poe (and others)
  • and the lyrics of Deep Purple.

Of course there’s a lot more to rhythm and pacing in novel writing than words set down in an artistic arrangement.  But I’ll touch on that next time.Be A Novelist

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Photo credit: © Stephenmeese | Dreamstime.com

 

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