Category Archives: Style

Narrative Pace: Too Much Information

Even a thriller can drag.

Knowing how much information to provide is one of the skills a writer hones to get really good at his or her craft. A love scene may require a different set of data—light, scent, the nuances of sound, the shape and degree of moisture present in a human eye. A torture-style interrogation may also use light, stink, noise, and the amount of white showing in a human eye, not to mention the beads of sweat. However, not only is the choice of details different in the two scenes but also the choice of words. Furthermore, the rate, number, and length of words controls the pace—scene by scene and chapter by chapter.

The Slog

For example, a scene in which the gumshoe is cornered by a dangerous thug and his two wing men:

Heroguy eased himself back into the Herman Miller Aeron chair Magda had given him as a little joke last Secretaries Day.

“True Black,” she had said, referring to the proprietary color of the ergonomic chair, a private dig at his preference for public radio in the afternoon.

There was going to be nothing ergonomic about the chair today. He could tell by the size of the fists balled up in the coat pockets of Mutt and Jeff.

“Nice view,” Badman said. He waved vaguely at the open door, and Mutt strolled over and closed it while his boss stood tensely looking out the window at the ninth floor view of the Miracle Mile. Mutt rejoined Jeff and the two of them settled their hind ends on the dusty surface of Magda’s credenza. Heroguy thought of all the fine whiskeys stored in that improvised seating and how much he was going to need a Scotch when this was all over. Mutt and Jeff looked at Badman for some direction, then seeing that they would not be needed immediately, they began examining the various objects in the room. The unused vintage coat rack kept for effect, the mini-fridge, the sharp edge of the tape dispenser.

“I like it.”

“I suppose you do.”

“What can I do for you?”

“The question is, what am I going to do to you?”

“I dunno. I need a little more information on that. For example, what do I have that you want, and how bad do you want it?”

“I think you know,” he said, and Heroguy did. He knew it all, and he was counting on there being more than a single helping left in the Scotch bottle. Badman turned to his bat boys. “Beat it out of him.”

Ugh! Wit aimed at a public radio audience. The problems pile up from the beginning: Heroguy should be thinking fast and furious about how to defend himself and what he can learn from this encounter. He should be on heightened alert because he is about to get beaten to a pulp. (The scene continues with a brutal assault upon Heroguy that leaves him scarred and humorless. The leisurely comedy is an inappropriate lead up.) The writer may be developing his character by building his radio leanings and relationship with his secretary into the scene, but this is sooooo not the time. The details are mostly random, as is the movement of the chess pieces around the room. The repartee is imitative of noir cinema dialog, but here it just feels like the racehorses have lined up at the gate and started to graze. Good films don’t have bad dialog for the same reason good novels don’t, but with this difference—an actor can sometimes infuse meaningless speech with subtext using face and voice and body language. In novels, dialog and its accompanying cues must be precise in order for the reader to supply the mental imagery that brings a character in a scene to life.

Stepping Up the Narrative Pace

[Move details desccribing  Magda and her reasons for giving Heroguy an ergonomic chair to some earlier, more appropriate character building scene.]

Heroguy eased himself back into his chair.

There was going to be nothing ergonomic about the chair today. He could tell by the size of the fists balled up in the coat pockets of Mutt and Jeff.

“Nice view,” Badman said and settled his hind end on the liquor cabinet, his back to the window. Heroguy thought of all the fine whiskeys stored in that improvised seating and how much he was going to need a Scotch when this was all over.

“I like it.”

“I suppose you do.”

He turned to his bat boys. “Beat it out of him.” Meaning, everything he wanted to know.

All the aimless wandering is gone. Badman’s character is sharpened by making his position the anchor and giving his placement a bit of subtext—he sits with his back to the window, so that his comment on the view refers to his being able to watch the forthcoming beating. He is laconic (though not quite the silent type—he does engage the protagonist) and goes directly to his business. His thugs are shadowy and undefined—mere fists in pockets with no details to distract the reader from the nature of the threat. Heroguy’s wry humor is preserved without the cumbersome brand names and inside jokes.  Badman sits on a liquor cabinet instead of the pointlessly pretentious credenza, a perfectly fine word that will nevertheless make the reader hesitate.

Narrative Pace and Point of View

One further refinement would increase the immediacy of the action and more closely identify the reader with our Heroguy: Make the POV first person.

“Nice view,” Badman said and settled his hind end on my liquor cabinet, his back to the window. I thought of all the fine whiskeys stored in that improvised seating and how much I was going to need a Scotch when this was all over.

This is not a generalization. First person POV is for when you want the reader to be the protagonist.

Decluttering

By extension, the practice of not cluttering up scenes with unimportant movement and detail should be applied to the book as a whole. How important is it that Heroguy’s chair is a Herman Miller and was a gift from Magda? It may be very important (only the author knows), but in weighing whether to build a whole scene around the origins of Heroguy’s chair, the author should consider whether Heroguy’s character and his relationship with Magda have already been pretty well defined—is the scene redundant? And can Magda afford to buy a Herman Miller chair on her salary? Does she like her boss that much? Does she often make exorbitant sacrifices for him? Is the author deliberately targeting a niche audience? Does the brand of chair somehow tie into the resolution of the mystery? Or is this level of detail, however funny or sublimely described or minutely researched, a drag on a story that should simply crack on?

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Narrative Voice: Grammar and Style

Narrative voice is like a car. Grammar is the frame and hoses and moving parts. Style is the result of choices that define the characteristics of an individual car. You can jack up a Wrangler to make it climb rocks. You can add a spoiler for whatever it is you think it does. Custom paint jobs, modified engines, daisy headlamps all tailor the look or performance of the car. Language is flexible and expandable, and some people are fond of saying there are no rules. But hold ’er, Newt. I’m not one of those.

Narrative Voice and the Anti-Existentialism of Grammar

The rules of grammar exist to give structure to language. A writer may bend or modify a rule, but only as long as the remaining structure better serves the narrative voice.

Her head moved just enough to swirl her black page-boy hair and the look she sent back to all those good people and their white-haired guardian of the law was something to be remembered. For one long second she had the judge’s eye and outraged justice flinched before outraged love. (Spillane)

…as he perceived, these shrewd people had quite made up their minds that she was going too far….Winterbourne wondered how she felt about all these cold shoulders turned towards her, and sometimes it annoyed him to suspect that she did not feel at all. … Then at other moments he believed that she carried about in her elegant and irresponsible little organism a defiant, passionate, perfectly observant consciousness of the impression she produced. (James)

As writers, Mickey Spillane and Henry James could not have much more different narrative voices. For Spillane, the shortest distance is a straight line—that’s all a bullet needs to get to the point. He didn’t waste ink over commas unless he needed them.  James was a punctuation opportunist, delivering the complexity of thought in kibbles and bits. Wheels within wheels. Grammatically, however, both of these passages are sound and solidly orthodox. Let’s mess up one line of James:

…as he perceived these shrewd people quite made up their mind about her going too far.

James had it his way. But it could also be edited to:

… he perceived that these shrewd people had quite made up their minds that she was going too far.

…as he perceived, these shrewd people had quite made up their minds about her: She was going too far.

These edits result in a change in narrative voice and style. A really presumptuous edit might inadvertently change the meaning as well:

…he watched as this crowd of shrewd people quite made up its mind that she had gone too far.

Style-Driven Modifications: High-Performance or Just Noisy

If a liberty taken with a grammatical rule results in confusion or misdirection, then it isn’t a matter of style—the writer has simply fouled up his vehicle’s performance.

Ed walked out. Dawn up: fresh light on a mob scene. Patrolmen held back reporters; rubberneckers swarmed. Horns blasted; motorcycles ran interference: meat wagons cut off by the crowd. Ed looked for high brass; newsmen shouting questions stampeded him.

In L.A. Confidential, James Ellroy used a narrative voice pared down to the skeletal. He wanted to reflect the fast, hard, sharp-edged perceptions of his characters (including the narrator), who operate in a violent, harshly lit landscape. These people don’t have time to pad out their thoughts with genial filler.

Ed walked out. Dawn was up: It cast a fresh light on what had become a mob scene. Patrolmen held back reporters;, and rubberneckers swarmed. Horns blasted; as motorcycles ran interference: for the meat wagons, which were being cut off by the crowd. Ed looked for any of the high brass who might be around; but while he was looking, newsmen shouting questions stampeded him.

To convey a rush of impressions, Ellroy simply left out all the words that weren’t necessary to carry the expression of more complete sentences. The essential grammatical structure remained intact despite the elided bits. This is not the same as throwing the rules out and letting the words fall as they may. Ellroy’s prose are crisp and brilliantly clear. The same could not be said if he had written “Running interference with motorcycles, the meat wagons were cut off by the crowd,” which dangles ugly and undignified in its confusion. Or even “Patrolmen held back reporters; rubberneckers swarming. Horns blast; motorcycles run interference: meat wagons cut off by the crowd”—which is just narrative confetti, lacking the immediacy of Ellroy’s construction.

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