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Index
Preface
The Funhouse of Mystery The Roller Coaster of Suspense The Writing Process
How to Write Killer Fiction
Introduction
Fiction Is Like a Dream Two Different Dreams Reason and Emotion Two Steps Ahead, Two Steps Behind Myth vs. Tale Larger World/Smaller World Information Concealed or Revealed Central Questions Crossovers Different Dreams, Different Choices Write What You Read
Part 1: The Funhouse of Mystery
1. Welcome to the Funhouse What is a Mystery Novel
Welcome to the Funhouse A Little Mystery History That Was Then, This Is Now The Classic Whodunit Other People's Troubles Write What You Read
2. Cover-Ups and Clues Basic Ingredients of the Mystery
Cover-ups
Cover-Up One: It Wasn't Murder Cover-Up Two: Some Other Dude Did It
Getting a Clue
What Is a Clue? Where Do You Get Your Clues? Clues in the Private Eye Novel Clues in the Police Procedural
3. Build Me and Arc, I The Structure of the Mystery Novel
Arc One: The Beginning (The Setup)
The Four-Arc System for Organizing Your Novel
Arc Two: The Big Bad Middle Arc Three: Waist-Deep in the Big Muddy
4. Endings are Hard, I Satisfying the Mystery Reader
The Non-Action Ending The Two-Layered Ending Why Endings Fail The Action Ending The Coda The Meta-Novel
Part 2: The Roller Coaster of Suspense
5. Buckle Up for the Ride What is a Suspense Novel?
The Roller-Coaster Effect A Little Suspense History Descendants of the Gothic Tradition Spy Fiction Offshoots Crimes and Capers
6. Myths and Dreams Basic Ingredients of Suspense Fiction
Rites of Passage The Hero's Journey
The Hero's Journey
Psyche's Journey to Hades
Task One: Separate the Seeds Task Two: The Golden Fleece Task Three: Go to Hell
7. Build Me an Arc, II The Structure of the Suspense Novel
The Prologue Arc One
Accepting the Adventure The Four Outcomes Suspense Writing
Arc Two
The Pendulum Isolate Your Hero
Clap if you believe in fairies. Hitting Bottom
Rift Within the Team Raising the Stakes
Arc Three
Building to Climax
8. Endings Are Hard, II Satisfying the Suspense Reader
How to Finish Your Book Before It Finishes You
And the Last Shall Be First Use the Setting Use the Characters A Full Measure of Justice
Endings that Satisfy Endings that Let the Reader Down Hostage: Arc Four Sting in the Tail Endings What Can You Do for an Encore?
Part 3: The Writing Process
9. Scene and Style The Basic Ingredients of the Novel
What Makes a Scene?
A Scene Driver Named Desire Surprises and Complications
How To Scene
Action Produces Reaction Fixing Problem Scenes
Talking Heads Talking in a Vacuum Exposition City Over-the-Top Emotions Lots of Talk, No Action The Incredible Jumping Conflict Trailing Off into Nothingness Failing to Link Back to Main Plotline or Subplot
The Storyboard Cliffhangers
Narrative—The Alternative to Scene
Uses of Narrative Putting Spin on the Narrative Ball
Style
Parts of Speech and How They Create Style Sentence Structure Stupid Dialogue Tricks
10. Outliners and Blank-Pagers The Writing Process
Expansion and Contraction
Wheat's Law of the Conservation of Plot Points
The Outliner's Process
The Changing Vision The Outliner's Toolbox Opening Up the Story Do the Opposite
The Blank-Pager's Toolbox
Give Your Characters Jobs Weeding Nurturing the Seedlings Fertilizing
Revision
The Good-Enough Chapter One The Non-Revision Revision Writing Is Rewriting The Writing Process: Tools to Help You Finish
Two Competing Forces: Expansion and Contraction Two Kinds of Writers: Outliners and Blank-pagers What they each have to learn: The expansive stage is easy and fun; it's the contractive stage that's work. So... Middlebook and how to survive it: Revision—love it or leave the business. Writer's Block Is a Gift—Use It Wisely
Epilogue: Next Step, Published!
Endings Are Hard, III
The Writing Zone
Giving Yourself What You Need Letting Go Preparing for Publication Back to the Zone
When Is It Finished?
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