We are all still learning and growing as writers, whether we’ve
been doing this a year, or twenty. Personally it's been about 12 years now for me, and I feel like I've picked up a few things along the way.
So I thought I would give my opinion on the 5 things I think you need to have to make your book work. These are my
opinions on what I look for when I’m reading, but maybe it will help you when
you look over your work to see what might need more work and what doesn’t.
1: Don’t give me characters that suck.
Ok – this is kind of subjective. But characters are oh
so important. If I don’t care about your characters I’m not going to care about
your book. If you can invest me in the characters then I will put up with a lot
of other issues and keep reading. This doesn’t mean the character has to be
perfect – quite the opposite, but I have to believe in their motivation. I have
to respect their attitude and opinions.
Let me give you an example from my own work. Lance in The Last Knight is
an arrogant, sometimes chauvinistic git. However, his past, his experiences and
his current life all give reasons for the way he behaves. And he grows and
changes throughout the book. Growth is vital.
By all means create a character who is as nasty as they
come, but as long as you give reasons and motivations for their behaviour, I’ll
still enjoy reading about them.
2: Don’t drown me in description
This kind of goes back to what Kate was saying in one of her
recent posts about not over-writing. But I will admit that there is nothing
worse than reading a book that is literally stuffed with description that does
nothing for the plot. I think sometimes as writers we worry that if we don’t
describe it enough the reader won’t be able to appreciate it. I think that that
is giving our readers too little credit. We don’t need every detail to appreciate
what something looks like – particularly if it’s something we’ve all seen
before. My mind will fill in the blanks quite nicely, and it will be a richer
reading experience for it.
3: Don’t leave
plot-holes big enough to drive a bus into
Plotting and world-building as essential. Even if your book
is set in this world everything that happens in it must be consistent. I need
to believe it, or at least have reasonable suspension of disbelief, no matter
how fantastical your plot is.
You don’t have to explain every little thing, but I should
be able to make the leap of understanding logically and easily based on what
you’ve told me so far.
4: Conversely, don’t make the mistake of thinking I’m an
idiot
There’s nothing worse than reading a book where the author
feels the need to explain every little thing. Ok, so this kind of falls under
the less is more point, but I’m talking more about plot and action. It’s also
more about show vs tell. If you show me the world in the right way, you don’t
need to explain why things happen a certain way, I should be able to work it
out for myself. If I can’t the likelihood is not that I’m stupid, but that you
haven’t shown me properly.
5: Don’t neglect the ending
Whether it’s a Happily Ever After, a bitter-sweet ending, a devastatingly
sad ending, or even a cliff-hanging leading onto the next book, your ending
needs to be satisfying to me as the reader. Otherwise I’m going to walk away
from the book feeling disappointed. The ending needs to work with the rest of
the book – even if there is a dramatic twist I need to look back and wonder how
I didn’t see it coming. Unless you are purely writing for yourself (in which
case you won’t be publishing) you have to consider the reader. I don’t need it
all wrapped up with a neat bow – but I need to put it down with the feeling of
a contentment, not frustration.
So there you have it. My 5 points for what I look for in a
good book. Notice I didn’t mention the writing, I can overlook the writing if
everything else is done well. For me writing a book is as much about
storytelling as it is about writing.
Have a good weekend!
Excellent advice, Nicola! These are all definitely worth a check before calling a piece of writing finished!
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