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Agnosticsherbet

(11,619 posts)
Wed Dec 2, 2015, 12:55 PM Dec 2015

Writer Unboxed: The Current by Donald Maass

Writer Unboxed: The Current
What about a novel sweeps us up into its world? What carries us along even when the imperatives of plot are on hold or absent? What makes us ache for something without knowing what it is? What makes us impatient for a story’s resolution at the same time that we want the tale to go on forever? What is it that causes us to feel that a story has touched our souls?
It’s not plot, scene dynamics or micro-tension. It’s not the inner journey. It’s not setting, voice or theme, although those things undeniably affect us. What I’m talking about is a deeper, seemingly mystical force that engages readers in a way they can’t explain and holds them rapt. It’s nothing overtly stated in your pages.
That irresistible, invisible current is a feeling. It’s a feeling that springs from what you wrote (how could it be otherwise) but which readers can only sense. It’s a feeling to which readers do not assign a name. What causes them to feel this feeling is not so much anything that you put into your story as the spirit that underlies it.
That spirit is hope.

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Writer Unboxed: The Current by Donald Maass (Original Post) Agnosticsherbet Dec 2015 OP
Thank you for posting this. classof56 Dec 2015 #1

classof56

(5,376 posts)
1. Thank you for posting this.
Thu Dec 3, 2015, 01:55 PM
Dec 2015

I have long held Donald Maass in high regard and would really like to attend one of his workshops. I joined NaNoWriMo last month, but only got to 17,000 words or so. I'm not giving up on my novel, a love story with some twists, but it does my heart good to read Maass's words about the spirit of hope that should inhabit our stories. Gives me hope to continue with my writing!

Best.

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