1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
2.0 out of 5 stars
Good, but limited, May 2 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Writing to the Point: A Complete Guide to Selling Fiction (Paperback)
Mr. Budrys claims to have the secret to writing fiction that will sell. His secret is very useful but short enough to include here:
Beginning: Must consist of introducing a character, in a particular context, with a problem. And if there are important yet unique/unusual aspects of the character that will be revealed later in the story they must be foreshadowed in the beginning.
Middle: Must involve the character attempting to solve the problem and encountering unexpected failure. During this attempt he begins to learn more about the problem and himself. The character must undergo stress which causes hitherto concealed facets of him to be revealed-that must fit in. The character must try to overcome the problem a total of 3 times on a rising scale of effort, commitment, and depth of knowledge of the problem and one's self. At the last possible moment, with maximum effort and staking everything, he achieves victory. This must be done by wagering everything in a do-or-die situation. Conversely the villain, coming closer to his goal experiences defeat snatched from the jaws of victory-because of some flaw in character.
End: Validation and foreclosure by someone who has no other vested interest in the story. They step forward and say "He's dead, Jim" or "Who was that masked man?" This serves to close the story in the reader's mind.
This short book repeats this pitch over and over and includes some unrelated info that is marginly useful but unrelated to the above points.
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