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Tightrope walking

tightrope walkerI am work­ing on a book, which, for want of a bet­ter term, aspires to be a page-turn­er. Full of sus­pense and sur­pris­es, it’s meant to be a gal­lop­ing nar­ra­tive. When one writes this kind of book, there are always vital issues of pac­ing. One of the spe­cif­ic con­cerns is how a chap­ter is constructed—not least, how to bring a chap­ter to an end in such fash­ion that it dri­ves the read­er for­ward and flings him/her on to the next. Simul­ta­ne­ous­ly, one wants chap­ters to be rel­a­tive­ly the same length. While clear­ly the text is manip­u­lat­ed, is must not appear so. 

All of this requires con­stant bal­anc­ing of the par­tic­u­lar moment with the whole, a con­stant back and forth for the writer, so that the read­er goes straight on. It is rather like a tightrope walk­er, who, even as she steps across the rope with an a look of absolute ease, is con­stant­ly dash­ing back and forth to make sure all the ties are tight, and the line taut. 

Besides, when you write a book like this there is no safe­ty net.

2 thoughts on “Tightrope walking”

  1. Your anal­o­gy to a tightrope walk­er rings true. Thank you for not only writ­ing books that encour­age kids to read…but adults, too!

    Reply
  2. With­out sound­ing too schmoozy, I’d just like to say you’ve done great before, you can do it more! Look for­ward to this page-turn­er and bal­anc­ing act from a great pro!

    Reply

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