Actual for You
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Writing and Speaking > Writing > Scenes and Structure

Tags

  • biting
  • sheet
  • provides
  • lights camera
  • stretch andsees
  • breakneck speed

  • Links

  • Forex, An Alternative Investment Vehicle
  • A Quick Visitor's Guide to Galveston
  • Buying A Massage Table
  • Actual for You - Scenes and Structure

    To Go Or Not To Go - How To Decide If This Marketing/Design Project Will Bring In Revenue
    Deciding to move forward on a design and marketing project can be a big deal, but it doesn't have to be. Beyond the emotional benefits of feeling more confident when promoting your business and looking more professional in front of prospects, brand recognition and a myriad of other benefits, let's just take a look at the numbers.For all of you number crunching, "Just bottom line it" business people out there, this bulletin will take a logical, methodical approach in helping you to decide whether to "Not go" or "go" on your next design project.Step 1: Investments, Not Expenses Smart business owners view design and marketing as opportuniti
    storms. These alternating scenarios can be regarded as scenes and their sequels.

    The scene involves the main characters in action and/or conflict. It usually contains dialogue. Picture it as a scene from a movie - lights, camera, ACTION!

    Following such a scene, you give your reader a chance to breathe, by moving into the sequel. The sequel is the logica

    Mystery Shopping - Fun, Flexibility And Financial Freedom
    Ever thought about Mystery Shopping? Mystery shopping agencies throughout the world have plenty of assignments for people who don't have the life style to commit to full time employment. If you play your cards right it could be your answer to fun, flexibility and financial freedom!Mystery Shopping is a growing industry. It allows members of your community to go out and shop, then be reimbursed for their efforts while evaluating the customer service of a particular retailer. The most attractive aspect of mystery shopping is the flexibility. One is able to devote as little or as much of their time as they like in order to complete an assignment, h
    Beginning writers often tend to think of a book as a series of chapters. It's actually more useful to regard it as a series of linked scenes. Why? Because it makes it a lot easier to control the pace of your story.

    'Pace' may be described as the forward movement of your story. Sometimes it will move at a slower pace than at other times. What you need to aim for is a story that moves along fast enough to maintain reader interest, but not at such breakneck speed that the reader doesn't have time to get to know the characters or assimilate the plot. Nor do you want your story to slow down too much. That can lead to your reader closing the book. (If that reader happens to be the editor to whom you hope to sell the story, you're in big trouble.)

    Scenes that contain a lot of action or conflict tend to elevate the reader's blood pressure. They have her whipping through the pages, anxious to absorb every moment of the drama being played out. A novel full of such scenes:

    1. is too tiring to read for hours at a stretch and

    2. sees the overall effect of each scene diminished so the entire novel loses punch.
    None of us can put up with constantly high stress levels without burning out!

    A book that moves at too rapid a pace is like a movie packed with one action scene after another-it's all too much. To appreciate and enjoy the conflict when it happens (in a nail-biting kind of way) we need periods of calm between the storms. These alternating scenarios can be regarded as scenes and their sequels.

    The scene involves the main characters in action and/or conflict. It usually contains dialogue. Picture it as a scene from a movie - lights, camera, ACTION!

    Following such a scene, you give your reader a chance to breathe, by moving into the sequel. The sequel is the logical

    Life Insurance: Cut The Pounds -- Cut The Premium
    Obesity is becoming a real problem in the UK. In the past twenty years the number of overweight adults has snowballed and latest figures estimate that more than half of the population of UK women are classed as overweight or obese. It’s even worse for men, with six out of ten coming into the “tubby or worse” classification.Unfortunately things don’t look so good for the future, either. A survey of children ranging in age from two year old toddlers to the mid-teenagers reveals that more than one in five boys and in excess of one in four girls are in the overweight range.Life insurance companies are aware of the health risks connected with the o
    or is a story that moves along fast enough to maintain reader interest, but not at such breakneck speed that the reader doesn't have time to get to know the characters or assimilate the plot. Nor do you want your story to slow down too much. That can lead to your reader closing the book. (If that reader happens to be the editor to whom you hope to sell the story, you're in big trouble.)

    Scenes that contain a lot of action or conflict tend to elevate the reader's blood pressure. They have her whipping through the pages, anxious to absorb every moment of the drama being played out. A novel full of such scenes:

    1. is too tiring to read for hours at a stretch and

    2. sees the overall effect of each scene diminished so the entire novel loses punch.
    None of us can put up with constantly high stress levels without burning out!

    A book that moves at too rapid a pace is like a movie packed with one action scene after another-it's all too much. To appreciate and enjoy the conflict when it happens (in a nail-biting kind of way) we need periods of calm between the storms. These alternating scenarios can be regarded as scenes and their sequels.

    The scene involves the main characters in action and/or conflict. It usually contains dialogue. Picture it as a scene from a movie - lights, camera, ACTION!

    Following such a scene, you give your reader a chance to breathe, by moving into the sequel. The sequel is the logica

    Tax Advantages of a Home Business
    Why is it a good idea to start a home business? Taxes. There are a lot of tax deductions that help lower your tax bracket. Working from home is a great way to make money, save money and keep your money.1. If you have to order every month in order to receive your check then the products are deductible. 2. Start up costs, like memberships are deductible. 3. Utility costs are deductible. Keep in mind only a percentage is deductible. (ex. electricity, phone and cell phone, internet service, water, sewer and garbage, rent/mortgage and house repair. Only deduct how much you use for business purposes. 4. Office supplies. (ex. Pens and
    u're in big trouble.)

    Scenes that contain a lot of action or conflict tend to elevate the reader's blood pressure. They have her whipping through the pages, anxious to absorb every moment of the drama being played out. A novel full of such scenes:

    1. is too tiring to read for hours at a stretch and

    2. sees the overall effect of each scene diminished so the entire novel loses punch.
    None of us can put up with constantly high stress levels without burning out!

    A book that moves at too rapid a pace is like a movie packed with one action scene after another-it's all too much. To appreciate and enjoy the conflict when it happens (in a nail-biting kind of way) we need periods of calm between the storms. These alternating scenarios can be regarded as scenes and their sequels.

    The scene involves the main characters in action and/or conflict. It usually contains dialogue. Picture it as a scene from a movie - lights, camera, ACTION!

    Following such a scene, you give your reader a chance to breathe, by moving into the sequel. The sequel is the logica

    Home Based Businesses - Can You Really Make Money From Home?
    In my five year search for a genuine home based business, I found that the road to personal financial freedom is long and twisted. If you've requested information for home based businesses on the internet lately, no doubt you've been bombarded by responses and promises to "make money within 24 hours", "quit your job in 30 days or less", "retire in 2 years", etc.Like most moderately intelligent, educated people, I threw caution to the wind and believed all the hype. I even invested money and time (lots of both) toward realizing my dream of owning my own business, working from the comfort of my home, making money on the internet, being my own boss an
    nished so the entire novel loses punch. None of us can put up with constantly high stress levels without burning out!

    A book that moves at too rapid a pace is like a movie packed with one action scene after another-it's all too much. To appreciate and enjoy the conflict when it happens (in a nail-biting kind of way) we need periods of calm between the storms. These alternating scenarios can be regarded as scenes and their sequels.

    The scene involves the main characters in action and/or conflict. It usually contains dialogue. Picture it as a scene from a movie - lights, camera, ACTION!

    Following such a scene, you give your reader a chance to breathe, by moving into the sequel. The sequel is the logica

    Smart Techniques Of Financing Off Balance Sheets
    Off Balance Sheet Financing involves raising money in a way that it does not appear on the financial statement as loan or cash flow. Some of the most widely used ways to achieve that is to go by joint ventures, leases and R&D partnerships. The lesser-used methods are trade receivables securitization and passing tax benefits to investors.Techniques for Off Balance Sheet Financing;Off Balance Sheet Financing uses the following techniques:1) The company forms a joint venture with a partner company. One party provides the technical know how while the other provides the funding. The smart way to structure Off Balance Sheet Financing is t
    storms. These alternating scenarios can be regarded as scenes and their sequels.

    The scene involves the main characters in action and/or conflict. It usually contains dialogue. Picture it as a scene from a movie - lights, camera, ACTION!

    Following such a scene, you give your reader a chance to breathe, by moving into the sequel. The sequel is the logical aftermath of the scene. In the sequel, the viewpoint character has time to think about what has just happened, what it means to him/her, and what he/she intends to do next. By planning your novel as a series of scenes and sequels, you can control the pace.

    Want to slow things down? Expand the sequel, the 'calm' period, which gives the character (and the reader) 'time out'.

    Want to speed things up? Shorten the sequel. For example:

    'By the time Marianne reached her apartment, she was good and mad. There was no way she intended to let Jake Rockford get away with a pathetic story like that! Five minutes after walking through her front door, she was dialling the Rockford's number. Within half an hour, she was pulling up in her sister's driveway, ready to do battle.'

    In just a few lines, you have pitchforked the reader into the next action-packed scene. We know that Marianne doesn't believe Jake's story. We know she's eager to confront Julie and/or Jake. And we haven't wasted any time getting her there: one scene leads very quickly into the next, thus keeping the story moving along at a smart clip.

    Learn to use scene and sequel effectively, and you retain control over the pacing of your novel. At all times the paramount question in your mind should be: How will this scene advance the story? If the answer is 'I don't know' or 'It won't, really' - then out it goes, no matter how well-wr

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.actual4u.com/article/166072/actual4u-Scenes-and-Structure.html">Scenes and Structure</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.actual4u.com/article/166072/actual4u-Scenes-and-Structure.html]Scenes and Structure[/url]

    Related Articles:

    Think You Have Got it Made with a Web Template

    Personal Loans for Bad Credit: Straightening Deformed Credit

    Writing Mood

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com