6. Give the protagonist a tight time limit; and then shorten it.
This doesn’t always work because the logic of many stories prohibits it; don’t use it unless you can work it in believably. But when time is a factor, and when the brief span of time in which he must resolve the conflict is then shortened, you have gone along way toward heightening the suspense.
7. Choose your character according to your own capacities as well as his.
Don’t use as your protagonist an accomplished professional spy unless you are prepared to do the research and groundwork necessary to create such a character convincingly. It is better, particularly when approaching the early stages of your own professionalism, to stick to the familiar. Some of the most successful suspense novel protagonists—many of Eric Ambler’s, for instance—are ordinary innocent people caught up in dangerous webs. The indignant honest idealist makes a good protagonist because his innocence makes the professional opposition all the more frightening. Yet a plot structure for this character is often difficult to contrive because in spite of his naïveté he has to be clever and not resourceful (not lucky) to prevail over his awesome enemies. The other face of this coin, of course, is the professional-crook–as-protagonist; he’s easy to identify with because he’s an outcast, and underdog, one man using his wit to survive against the society’s oppressive machinery; but the pitfalls of this are treacherous and unless you know criminal procedure and feel comfortable competing with Anthony Burgess and Richard Stark, it’s better to avoid the crook-hero in the beginning.
8. Know your destination before you set out.
The prevailing weakness of many suspense stories which are otherwise successful is the let-down the reader experiences at the end: the illogical and disappointing anti-climax. It isn’t enough to set up intriguing conflicts and obey all the other rules if you haven’t got an ending that fulfills the promise of the preceding chapters. It becomes disgustingly obvious when a writer has confronted his hero with thrilling obstacles only to paint himself into a corner. Presented with his own unsolvable cliffhanger he is reduced to bringing in deus-ex-machina to solve the hero’s problems for him. It is not necessary to tie up all loose ends but the climax should resolve the principal conflict one way or another. (In recent years, to avoid the dish in of clichés a virtue triumphant or ironic downfall, several talented novelists have resorted to obscure endings which you know reader can possibly decipher. I’d rather hope the fad is dying out; whatever the reasons behind it, it demonstrates lazy thinking and infuriates the reader.) The best way to a good ending is to know what the ending will be before you start writing the book. Whether you write a preliminary outline or not, you should know where the journey will end, and how.
9. Don’t rush in where angels fear to tread.
I admit this is a catch-all. Essentially I mean that it is wise to observe not only with the pros do but also what they avoid doing. The best writers do not jump on bandwagons; they build new ones. The pro doesn’t write a caper novel about the world’s biggest heist unless he’s convinced he can write an unusual story with a unique and important twist. Otherwise he risks unfavorable comparison with the classics in that sub-genre. “Why bother with it if it’s not as hot as Rififi and not as funny as The Hot Rock ?” Yet this should not be taken to mean every writer must obey faddish advice such as, “Spy fiction is dead,” or, “Historical novels are out the season.” There is no such thing as a “dead genre” because the human imagination is limitless and there is never a dearth of new ideas, new twists, new talent. The question is, Is this idea strong enough and important enough to make this story sufficiently different from its predecessors to merit publication? If a novel is good enough it will find a publisher whether it is a hard-boiled detective story, a western, a spy novel, a historical adventure, or a novel about bug-eyed monsters from Mars. If it is it good enough the publishers may reject it by seeing that such novels are out of style, but this is merely a euphemism.
10. Don’t write anything you wouldn’t want to read.
This one sounds self-evident but I’ve met several young writers who decided they wanted to start out by hacking their way through Gothics or westerns just to learn the ropes, because those categories looked easy to imitate. Nuts. If you start out that way you’ll end up a hack. Now if you like to read westerns, then write a western. But don’t write into a genre for which you have contempt. If you don’t Gothics but insist on writing one, your content will show; you can’t hide it. You’ll end up by “writing down” and the reader will resent your attitude. I don’t say you can’t sell books this way; God knows people do, all too often; but if you thoroughly enjoy sea stories—even if you don’t know a thing about nautical life—you’re better off attempting to write a sea story because you’ll go into it with enthusiasm, you’ll make it a point to learn the terminology and the life, and you’ll write a far better book.
Under various names I wrote some fifty novels in order to learn some of the above precepts. This has been written in the hope that one or two of my ten rules will help you.
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