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#1 |
Wizard
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As a reader, a plea to new writers - please don't feel obliged to explain everything in great detail !
I've just finished reading a new ebook, by a newish author. I prefer not too name it, I simply bring this up as a possible tip from a reader for all new authors, if that's not too presumptious. The idea was interesting, the characters fine. Not a ground-breaking piece by any means, but readable - if it weren't for the lengthy descriptions, at least one a chapter, of either equipment, technology, historical occurrance, famous dead person, inventor...oh, the list could go on. And it all has to be explained in painfully minute detail, at great length, most of which has no bearing on the story in any way. We know you do research, we know you are an expert in certain fields, we know how you see particular events/personages in history...God, do we ever. I estimate nearly a fifth of the book is involved in explaining things totally needlessly. And it's a trait I've noticed before in new writers. If it doesn't move the story on - do we need it ? Pleaser, ALWAYS err on the side of "no we don't.......... " ![]() |
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#2 |
Wizard
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Just finished a book like that... and I agree. And I am a new author, but I was/am a avid reader so I had some clue before I started.
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#3 |
Independent Author
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I read something like that recently as well. Thankfully, the core idea of the novel was strong enough that I was able to skim the infodumps and read through it to the good stuff... because the good stuff really was that good.
Yeah... save the infodumps for as late as you possibly can... and even then, if you can edit them so that they don't "dump" quite so much, you'll be much better off when pulling readers in. "As you know, Bob" really doesn't go over very well anymore. |
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#4 |
Wizard
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I try to leak information in bits and pieces. For example...
Some dude walked into a store, and he had to duck because his 8' 3" height was to tall for the standard 8' door frame. as opposed to As you may know ever since Doc Jackson the third invented the standard door frame which was made out of gopher wood in New Jersey on a rainy Thursday morning they have been precisely 96 inches tall because that was his 3rd wife's favorite number. This of course meant trouble for Some Dude who was a direct decedent of a harlem globe trotter which of course meant he was very tall. In fact he was at least 99 inches tall so that meant would have to duck down at least 4 inches.... blah. ![]() (fee free to make a story out of that, and give me 10% of gross sales ![]() |
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#5 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Yep I've seen that bit of advice before myself. Sinclair Lewis is supposed to have read over an effort by a new writer and told them to throw the 1st 96 pages of their 100 pages away. When the young author protested that they had had to set the scene Mr. Lewis asked,'for 96 pages?' "If I want a history of the Azores," he said,"I'll get National Geographic." I stopped reading "The Valley of Horses" by Jean Auel because the story stopped moving while a history of the land began. Maybe someday I'll go back to it, but I'm sure I'll skip over a large chunk of text if I do. Story has to move forward and large chunks of data, however interesting, stop a story cold.
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#6 |
Member
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The only author I've ever seen incorporate intricate detail without boring readers to death is Alexandre Dumas. All his works are extremely wordy. This is probably because his work, when first published, was serialised for newspaper and he was paid per word.
Having said that, his style of incorporating even the most mundane detail and keeping the story interesting is something most of us will likely never emulate. Last edited by bektamun; 08-20-2011 at 09:47 PM. Reason: typo |
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#7 |
Zealot
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*** " Some dude walked into a store, and he had to duck because his 8' 3" height was to tall for the..." ***
I bet you meant "too tall..." I hate it that spell checkers don' t know the difference... ;-) |
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#8 |
Wizard
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[QUOTE=VydorScope;1709918.........Some dude walked into a store, and he had to duck because his 8' 3" height was to tall for the standard 8' door frame... ..........
![]() My apologies, ![]() So, how about.. " An 8'3'' dude walked into a store, and had to duck because of the standard 8' door frame... " I'm even doubtful about the "standard". I know, it is a bit anal, isn't it. Old habits ...................... [ 'course, it don't apply when I'm writing, only other people !! ![]() |
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#9 | |
Wizard
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#10 |
Wizard
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#11 |
Wizard
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#12 |
Lord of Frogtown
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Then again, Moby Dick could serve as a whale-hunting manual — talk about detail! — but on the whole it seems to work. This is probably just one more area where it's tough to say anything categorical.
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#13 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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#14 | |
Guru
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Quote:
I once read a critique from an editor complaining that too many writers had main characters with green eyes when green eyes aren't nearly so common in the general population. ![]() |
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#15 |
Wizard
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Infodumps are tricky. We all prefer to see details skillfully woven into dialog and action or otherwise distributed in a way to avoid drawing attention to it. Some authors do quite well up to a point and then step over the line. I happened to recently read John Scalzi's Old Man's War trilogy recently. I started off impressed with his weaving and then, at times, it fell on its face.
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