Fiction, whether books or movies, trades in human emotions,
which means delivering carefully packaged emotional experiences. Books and
movies are emotion generators.
When was the last time you saw a movie or book ad that said,
“well-structured, great plot points, fresh dialogue?” No. What you see it,
“Grabs from the first page to last, funny, gritty, intense, haunting, gripping,
hugely satisfying.” The focus is all about emotions, because that’s what the
reader/audience craves. Emotion is what sells; it’s what keeps readers coming
back for more.
Alfred Hitchcock, the master of suspense and audience
manipulation, once said, “We’re not making a movie; we’re making an organ, like
in a church. We press this chord and the audience laughs. We press that chord,
and they gasp. We press these notes and they chuckle.
Aspiring writers are constantly told to hone their craft. But what does that mean? Craft is the ability to
make things happen on the page. Specifically, it’s the technical ability to
control language to create an intentional emotion or image in the reader’s
mind, hold his attention, and deliver a rewarding experience. Craft is about
the ability to connect with your reader.
Your job is to seduce the reader, to make them keep turning
pages to see what happens next, to captivate them by drawing them into the
world you’ve created. You want them to forget they're reading words on the page,
and feel something. In order to do that, you have to find the most exciting and
emotionally involving way to tell your story well.
Each page needs to be crafted to make the reader feel
tension anxiety, laughter, anticipation, grief or terror, and to manage those
visceral feelings into a satisfying experience by the last page.
For some readers, you have thirty pages to hook them. For
many it’s ten pages. But the reality is that the first page, and the next, and
the next must catch the reader’s attention and hold it. The way to do that is
to manipulate the reader’s feelings on each page, which is quite different from
manipulating your character’s feelings. Your character on the page may be
laughing his ass off, yet you make choose to have the reader crying from
anguish.
So on each and every page you write, it’s important to know
what emotions your characters are feeling at that moment, but more important
that you understand what emotions you are creating in the reader. Make them
laugh, make them cry, make them sigh, but make the feel something.
Publishers buy and sell emotion. Therefore, if you want to
become a successful novelist or screenwriter you must create emotional
experiences in your work.
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