People think the best part of the story is the climax. While
that should be the place where everything culminates, it is in the calmer scenes
leading up to this that the energy is built. If every scene was as exciting as
that one, then the audience would be exhausted far before reaching it.
Quieter moments are great times for characterization. You
learn about the people you are dealing with, what their thoughts and feelings
are, and the wheels start turning. A tale takes time to build up speed, but
once it does, it is like a freight train barreling through the night.
The shorter the story, the briefer these interludes will be.
A longer work is more conducive to deeper characters, so there is a great deal
of calm before the storm. And just like the interval between the thunder and
lightning, these moments when properly spaced can steadily build the excitement
to a fever pitch.
These are also good opportunities to subtly advance the
plot. A myriad of things can creep about unnoticed until they are ready to
strike. And when they do, there will be more impact, due to the element of
surprise.
Works tend to be predictable when everything is loud and all
the scenes are big. However, a reader will take on an expression of shock, if
they realize that the monster has been sneaking up behind them the whole time.
Or they find the plot which seemed so clear was just a diversion and the story
takes unexpected twists and turns that have them clutching the arms of their
chair to keep from falling out.
That is when the terror is greatest and the drama most
intense. The reader has no idea where you are taking them, but the enticement
is just too great to stop. They must know what happens next. They must reach
the ending, bewildered though they may be. For after the calm, one experiences the
true fury of the tempest.
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