The Secret Behind EVERY Bestselling Novel

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  • čas přidán 27. 02. 2021
  • What's the key to a successful novel that sells thousands - or millions - of copies? In this video, I reveal the secret ingredient behind every great novel and go through examples from bestselling books so you can see how it operates in action. With these tips and bits of novel writing advice, you'll be on your way to strengthening your story, hooking readers, and successfully publishing.
    ------------------------------
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    GREAT BOOKS ABOUT WRITING/PUBLISHING:
    Dreyer’s English: An Utterly Correct Guide to Clarity and Style by Benjamin Dreyer / amzn.to/3VE8dtt
    Save the Cat! Writes a Novel by Jessica Brody / amzn.to/3Vyk2Bn
    Before and After the Book Deal by Courtney Maum / amzn.to/3Z4at03
    SOME OF MY FAVORITE NOVELS:
    An American Marriage by Tayari Jones / amzn.to/3vvWItt
    Fierce Kingdom by Gin Phillips / amzn.to/3CFz4Pt
    Such a Fun Age by Kiley Reid / amzn.to/3CjFFi5
    ------------------------------
    RELATED LINKS:
    The Secret to Writing Likeable Characters: • The Secret to Writing ...
    How to Become a Bestselling Author: • How to Become a Bestse...
    ABOUT ME:
    My name is Alyssa Matesic, and I’m a professional book editor with 7+ years of book publishing and editorial experience. Throughout my career, I’ve held editorial roles across both sides of the publishing industry: Big Five publishing houses and literary agencies. The goal of this channel is to help writers throughout the book writing journey-whether you're working on your manuscript or you're looking for publishing advice.
    Feel free to get in touch!
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    ------------------------------
    Some of the links above are affiliate links. This means that, at zero cost to you, I may earn a commission if you click through the link and finalize a purchase.
  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 160

  • @AlexArthur94
    @AlexArthur94 Před 8 měsíci +30

    I've once heard this idea summarized as: make sure that the reader always has questions that they MUST have answered so they will be compelled to keep reading.

  • @gregothy9190
    @gregothy9190 Před 3 lety +160

    It's nice to see a booktuber with actual experience in the publishing industry, great content :)

    • @AlyssaMatesic
      @AlyssaMatesic  Před 3 lety +17

      Thanks so much!

    • @christinabriggs1782
      @christinabriggs1782 Před rokem +5

      I hope to be a best selling author. Thank you for such great content. Love this. I'm currently working on my first YA novel. 😬

    • @charliemgray
      @charliemgray Před 10 měsíci +1

      I 100% agree! 🤗

    • @stijnvdv2
      @stijnvdv2 Před 4 měsíci +1

      And some decent advice plus the honesty that it's her opinion, bit different from the other author tubers. That said, the reputation of the author tubers is a bit tarnished. Certainly while they published books wherein they don't practice what they preach and basically putting all the tropes in it that they tell you not to use. It is indicative of a profound lack of self-reflection, which is ironical as the educational system keeps drilling everybody, especially millennials and Gen Z with self-reflection models.... doesn't seem to stick very well.... the quality of the educational system or more specifically total lack there off is a debate for another time.

    • @carmilitatignaI555
      @carmilitatignaI555 Před 2 měsíci

      @@christinabriggs1782 how's the book coming along christina?

  • @johnparnham5945
    @johnparnham5945 Před 4 měsíci +12

    I'm writing a middle-grade novel about two children who go into the woods and find themselves in the ice age. Its called "Ice" it needs to have plenty of suspense to create the sense of adventure needed in every middle-grade adventure story.

    • @malloryschoenberg683
      @malloryschoenberg683 Před 3 měsíci

      This sounds SO GOOD. Oh my gosh…I love it and I felt I had to comment to tell you I would have 100% read that as a kid!!

  • @freedomthroughspirit
    @freedomthroughspirit Před 15 dny +1

    Educated by Tara Westover was SUCH a fascinating, intense read. A difficult read at times, for sure, but I found it very compelling. Psychologically, emotionally, and in terms of the subject matter of fundamentalism, and, of course, on education. As soon as you shared this opening I recognized it! I'm not usually much of a memoir fan but this was a powerful one. Great video, thank you.

  • @shinaxia7474
    @shinaxia7474 Před rokem +47

    You are 100% right. I've been writing books forever and I've looked at many "guides, but this one is probably the best. People say: believable protagonist, interesting plot, good conflict, but a lot of books have that and they don't sell well. When I look back, it's the suspense that I remember most in books. I remember when I read "The Count of Monte Christo" and had to go to school. I couldn't concentrate all the time wondering how the duel between the Count and Albert would go, because, after all, Albert couldn't be killed by Edmund. Now an example from the Chinese series "Sparrow." - I knew that the main character was not going to die (at least not until the last episode) but in each episode I felt anxiety, insecurity, what would happen next, how they would get out of the situation. I couldn't tear myself away from this drama.
    Thank you for this video, because it really helped me. While watching it I had some scenes from my books in front of my eyes and wondered if they were ok. They are. Unfortunately, there are a little too few of them. I need to work on multiplying them without losing quality :)

    • @AlyssaMatesic
      @AlyssaMatesic  Před rokem +8

      The Count of Monte Cristo is an excellent example of tension/suspense in a novel! Thanks for sharing your perspective, Shin!

  • @rowan7929
    @rowan7929 Před 3 lety +23

    Getting pulled in can be subjective. For me, it's the character and his or her reasons. Their motive. Even the world they live in.

  • @gilcori1234
    @gilcori1234 Před rokem +9

    I once hear, can't remember who said it, that writers should create questions in their writing that readers can only get answered by continuing to read. I've tried to take that to heart.

  • @anthonybennett381
    @anthonybennett381 Před 2 lety +13

    Alyssa, I have been fumbling in the dark and spent a goodly sum on educating myself in the art of novel writing for three years. Finally, I have 95k of work I am reasonably pleased with and then ... I discover you. How I wish I had the benefit of your insights before now. However, you now give direction to my editing, publishing and some re-writing phase. You offer exactly what I have been finding the need of and have made an old writer very happy.

    • @AlyssaMatesic
      @AlyssaMatesic  Před 2 lety +4

      This makes me so happy! Thanks so much for sharing and I'll be rooting for you!

  • @kathygwizdala3858
    @kathygwizdala3858 Před 5 měsíci +5

    I see you added suspense to your message with the drumroll. 😄 I'm really enjoying your videos. Thank you.

  • @Gulbakshi
    @Gulbakshi Před 3 měsíci +3

    You are a real hero for the writers............ Love you Alyssa !!! (Sachin Jadhav - India)

  • @faithfullspurlock8881
    @faithfullspurlock8881 Před 12 dny

    Awesome! I’m writing my story. A life so full of miracles and loves ever changing experiences that need to be told, to make a difference!
    But the unfolding of the truths I’ve found most difficult I think you can help me.

  • @Bigcatloco
    @Bigcatloco Před 3 měsíci +3

    I'm so thankful for your content.

  • @RichardLeClair-bx7ww
    @RichardLeClair-bx7ww Před 3 měsíci +1

    Just discovered your channel... Subscribed! Great content; I'm already thinking of ways to apply this to my trilogy-in-progress. I look forward to more awesome input!

  • @richardzahra4128
    @richardzahra4128 Před 2 lety +2

    An insightful explanation. Well done!

  • @cynthialovesbooks
    @cynthialovesbooks Před 2 lety +5

    This was really great advice. I've recently discovered your channel and am really enjoying your videos. Thank you.

  • @ninecatsmagee8384
    @ninecatsmagee8384 Před 2 lety +21

    Must say -- I was blown away by your advice and have been binge-watching today, trying to catch up with all that you've offered on this channel. In the midst of writing what's turned into an epic novel, I've been trying to decide if it all belongs in one book and if the core will bear stretching into a trilogy. I went after an agent too soon [as I now see] and the idea wasn't fully formed; hadn't really taken shape. I've found so much here and thank you for adding your voice to the milling information on youtube about writing and getting published. What you're saying and the way you present it works for me and nothing else has.

  • @getinnerds
    @getinnerds Před 2 lety +4

    I've just started writing again and I'm trying my hand at starting a romance series. These videos have been really useful so far! Thanks.

  • @user-mh9ic4uq4p
    @user-mh9ic4uq4p Před 3 lety +2

    Thank you so much for your videos, Alyssa! I am so grateful for the advice you're willingly giving out; it's helping me to form a clear picture of the publishing industry, and to help me become the best writer I can be. Your personal experience in the industry really shows. Please, keep posting - you're fantastic! I have subscribed and liked 👍

  • @noellewillow2429
    @noellewillow2429 Před 2 lety +4

    Amazing video. Been writing writing long time and now just trying to get published. Your videos are always great !

  • @scottjackson163
    @scottjackson163 Před 2 měsíci +1

    I appreciate your information and your attitude. Many editors who make videos promulgate lists of “never” and “don’t” rules that choke the mind with restrictions that needn’t be brought into play during the first draft. 👏

  • @saby777
    @saby777 Před rokem +18

    So I have finished my book back in 2020 December. I started it in August 2020 and its a romance-drama-mystery genre. During the whole story I myself didn't know what I was writing. I had a small vision of the book about a girl who meets a guy and a past they shared together comes up. I wanted it to be just a short love story. And more than the romance genre I was focused on adding mystery to their personalities and friction when the two got together. Slowly as I was writing I realised there were more questions that needed to be answered. My original goal was to make it around 50-60k. But then when I tried to re-read it again, the questions just kept coming up and I myself was intrigued to see what would happen next. I kept going with the flow and the story ended up as a 110,000k book but this time with the focus on the later chapters on the guy's personality. It turned out to be extremely romantic yet really empowering. I learned that write what you want to write. As though you are living that experience. Put your own personality into your protagonist and make it realistic, give them a goal and then turn the whole universe against them. Write as though you are writing a diary. Forget important stuff for a while but mention it here and there. Honestly it comes from that inner flow. Feel how important this story is to you and keep writing. Eventually you'll see questions coming up and you'll be compelled to answer them. Now I'm editing it and trying to cut short a bit, focus on spell check, grammar etc.

    • @sabsk122
      @sabsk122 Před 9 měsíci

      Did you ever finish your novel? I'd love to read it

  • @ddahstan6876
    @ddahstan6876 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Thank You. Thank YOU!! I truly appreciate your expertise because your explanation and the examples will help me to revise my little short story that I'm writing for my class. I can feel that it'll be like night and day difference!

  • @SaraDunn-fw5xh
    @SaraDunn-fw5xh Před měsícem

    Two of my favourite books. Thank you for the illustration

  • @SaberStories
    @SaberStories Před 5 měsíci +1

    I started world building for my first novel. I have the overall story arc down. I decided to first write a separate short story. Hopefully to garner interest for my novel but also for more experience writing. Thank you for your videos!

  • @elizabethruckman6551

    Thank you very much for this! It’s helping me with shaping my piece very well. It fantasy but I’ve always had that problem with making suspense especially through the eyes of the narrator

  • @AlohaTrev
    @AlohaTrev Před 2 lety +19

    My guess is that the real secret is finding an editor as insightful as Alyssa

  • @clintoreilly
    @clintoreilly Před 2 lety +10

    I've saved this video for my revision & rewrite process. Wow! Alyssa, you have a good heart-a sharing one. And I appreciate your experience and wisdom. :) Thanks

  • @michaelmuxworthy9926
    @michaelmuxworthy9926 Před 3 lety

    Hello. I watched this video yesterday, and today I begin yet another rewrite of my first work of fiction. After some time to reflect on your message and discuss it with my partner, I had to come back and say "thank you" for the excellent advice. I just put a note at the beginning and end of 23 chapters ... "REMEMBER SUSPENSE!" LOL.

  • @galinkovachev3601
    @galinkovachev3601 Před rokem

    I am halfway through my novel and wathcing all of your videos, really got me wishing you was my editor. It'd be a dream come true:(

  • @russellmarvin2850
    @russellmarvin2850 Před 2 lety +2

    I love all of you videos. Video teaching me a whole lot that I need to watch out for in my writing. As well as what I need to write better for.

  • @Rejectcolinization
    @Rejectcolinization Před rokem +4

    I’m writing a mind blowing best seller. I have had an extremely traumatic life. With all types of twists, turns and aha moments. Things you would never even guess. This was very good advice! Liquid gold ! Thank you ❤

  • @kenward1310
    @kenward1310 Před 2 lety

    Fantastic advice. Thank you.

  • @livelife2324
    @livelife2324 Před 7 měsíci

    The moment you started talking about suspense, the first thing that came to my mind was Taylor Jenkins Reid. I've only read Malibu Rising and Seven Husbands. She does it so well

  • @seawolf365
    @seawolf365 Před měsícem

    This was helpful.

  • @simsimahmadi9133
    @simsimahmadi9133 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks!! Useful info

  • @DalCecilRuno
    @DalCecilRuno Před 3 lety +4

    Oh! I...write suspense in my stories. Nice! Finally I'm doing one thing right. :)

  • @paulrobinson9087
    @paulrobinson9087 Před 3 lety +18

    It’s great to see your channel growing. As always, the way in which you present is refreshing, adding worked examples shows you know what you are talking about and challenges us to look at our own book bucket list.
    I loved the prose of When the Crawdads Sing, this is what drew me into this story. And, although, I am no expert, if a book can pose a question the reader wants an answer too, then that will draw them in and make the book successful. The question which will make the reader want to continue is, of course, variable on the genre and hence the reader. A great book can bring, say, an avid horror reader into a romance book.
    Keep going with the channel!

    • @AlyssaMatesic
      @AlyssaMatesic  Před 3 lety +4

      Thanks so much for the kind words! Agree the prose is so lyrical and alluring in WTCS.

  • @user-nm9id4st5l
    @user-nm9id4st5l Před 2 měsíci

    Great contents, improving your audio quality highly suggested.

  • @wardaniendang9038
    @wardaniendang9038 Před 7 měsíci

    Thanks a lot miss. Its so easy to learn. Me from Indonesia!!

  • @clementifangblog8583
    @clementifangblog8583 Před 7 měsíci

    Lovely❤❤❤❤ thanks for sharing

  • @user-xd4ug1of9j
    @user-xd4ug1of9j Před 11 měsíci

    Great piece

  • @christophersmith3695
    @christophersmith3695 Před rokem

    suspense is the promise of possibility balanced with a degree of doubt. I was lucky to learn this long before I wrote my debut romantic memoir and was able to incorporate it. It went on to win fifteen awards and two publication offers.

  • @DarkTider
    @DarkTider Před rokem

    As someone working on a long running series of comic books, there is arguably an even bigger pressure to include some kind of suspense in every PAGE, in order to keep the reader turning them, so that each page is never completely resolved, but the resolution is always on the next page, so it keeps them turning, or said resolution leads to a new, minor, question to be resolved on the following page :)

  • @deeburks
    @deeburks Před rokem +2

    This is very good.

  • @sunilkshortshindi34
    @sunilkshortshindi34 Před rokem

    Very helpful video ❤❤❤❤

  • @mycatlovesme159
    @mycatlovesme159 Před měsícem +1

    I use rising action in every chapter also known as suspense.

  • @gothicwriter9897
    @gothicwriter9897 Před 2 lety +2

    I love your channel. I am trying to get suspense on every page of my wip using Donald Maas' Breakout Novel Workbook as an editing prompt - along with your videos obviously. My wip is a UK Reacher meets Bond style series. I have draft A of book 1 complete and in self-edit, book 2 almost complete, and stories for book 3 and 4 in progress. I am going to try for an agent, with help from your videos, so please keep them coming.

  • @phillipjones3766
    @phillipjones3766 Před 3 lety +4

    I like your channel and you good advice. May I suggest that the background music is a tiny bit distracting from your presentation:)

  • @welovecrete
    @welovecrete Před 3 měsíci

    Thanks Alyssa, I was getting stuck in my draft novel. I was re-reading it and feeling it was lacking 'something'. Even I was bored. Something hard to put my finger on. Now I have a clear approach to creating suspense. I think this works as we are naturally problem-solving animals, our brains want some problem to solve. I have resisted having conflict in my novel but I now believe I need internal conflict - which is essentially growth - for the character - and suspense, as outlined so well in this video. BTW I am writing a women's fiction / rom com novel. So it is a good example - all novels need suspense - not just thrillers. Respect.

    • @AlyssaMatesic
      @AlyssaMatesic  Před 3 měsíci

      So glad you found this helpful! Good luck with your novel!

  • @cabe0018
    @cabe0018 Před 4 měsíci

    Such a wonderful video, thanks Alyssa for being direct and substantiating your opinions with superb examples.
    I have a question for you, as I am currently drafting a novel. In each chapter, there is an element of suspense. Sometimes, there are many elements which amp up the scene and raise the stakes. Is there such a thing as too much suspense?
    And a follow up question, when should this suspense be resolved, if at all? Should resolution be left until the very last few pages as a general rule of thumb?
    Thanks so much and keep up your genuine and spectacular work

  • @babavee100
    @babavee100 Před 4 měsíci +1

    If I am not intrigued or amused by the first few pages (which I read in the shop or library) it goes back on the shelf and I will neither buy nor borrow it.
    A full, hard back novel is so expensive nowadays and I can't take the risk unless it is by one of the 'great novelists who never disappoint.
    my advice as an avid reader, to anyone who is writing their first novel....make your first pages count !

    • @AlyssaMatesic
      @AlyssaMatesic  Před 4 měsíci +1

      Such a great point - those opening pages are crucial if you want to hook readers (and/or agents)!

  • @testtor2714
    @testtor2714 Před rokem

    Wow. So much beauty in only one person alone.

  • @SAArcher
    @SAArcher Před 2 lety +2

    Donald Maass' books agree with this. Pretty much exactly

  • @randydaniel8494
    @randydaniel8494 Před 9 měsíci

    Thanks!

  • @sincerelin
    @sincerelin Před rokem

    Hi,
    I am glad I found you on CZcams. I am currently working on my memoir. This is my very first book and I have very high hopes for this one. Would you mind reading the first 4 chapters for insight? I need your expert advice.😊

  • @brindlebucker4741
    @brindlebucker4741 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks so much for this video, Alyssa! It's a great topic, and, again, I thoroughly enjoyed your use of examples to illustrate your points, and it was instructive how the excerpts were so different from each other. In the last example, it is, as you say, a case of wondering, 'So, what DID happen?' but there is also a tickle in the back of the mind that says, 'Maybe this IS what happened, and if so, why has she repressed it?' Either way, you want to find out more.
    One tiny niggle- the editing is a bit jumpy in this. Didn't detract from my learning, but was noticeable enough to draw the attention. But please, keep the content coming.

  • @EfiLovesBooks
    @EfiLovesBooks Před 2 lety +4

    "Tension" conveys the same idea without all the "it's not just for Thrillers!" caveats.

  • @huxley8575
    @huxley8575 Před 7 dny +1

    1:43 is when she finally says it.

  • @coreya603
    @coreya603 Před 3 lety +17

    Great video! Someone recently read my MS and said the whole time they were reading, they felt like a cat chasing a piece of string someone was holding. I thought it was a pretty good compliment!

    • @AlyssaMatesic
      @AlyssaMatesic  Před 3 lety +6

      I agree -- that's a wonderful compliment! Congratulations!

  • @Thenoobestgirl
    @Thenoobestgirl Před rokem

    This is why 'Of Cages & Crowns' by Brianna Joy Crump is going to be a best seller immediately this month!

  • @victorbryan5482
    @victorbryan5482 Před 2 lety

    Subscribed!

  • @BudsCartoon
    @BudsCartoon Před 4 měsíci

    I can't wait to write some fiction. I'm deep in a non-fiction "based on real events" from the 1870's with real characters and real events, unheard of characters and events, but I'm tasked with creating a story to tie it all together and giving characters depth. What you reveal and when you decide to reveal it plays a lot into suspense.

  • @beny9253
    @beny9253 Před 3 lety +1

    Nice video. I tried to come up with another thing that makes all good books worth reading, and honestly couldn't. Even non-fiction that's worth reading uses it's prose to achieve this.

  • @johnmccullough4178
    @johnmccullough4178 Před 6 měsíci

    Thanks. Your videos are great. I think the word suspense should be replaced with "wondering" ; wondering what is next. wondering that keeps us up at night.

  • @marilyncairns18
    @marilyncairns18 Před 3 měsíci

    tHANK U-QUITE INFORMATIVE!! Could this be applied to a children's Book as well!

  • @himcules100
    @himcules100 Před rokem

    You are addictive, lady. I should be working on my novel, but I am absorbing much information from your vids. I am trying to infuse my murder mystery with word-clues and also an historical theme imbedded in the background. I don't believe it will distract or take anything away from the story, however, I have a long way to go. Do you have any examples that include something like these?

  • @marielalunetta6489
    @marielalunetta6489 Před rokem

    Ty

  • @Zobovor
    @Zobovor Před 3 lety

    6:25 Thought my record player was skipping.

  • @Carrie-R-Goodman
    @Carrie-R-Goodman Před rokem +2

    It’s nice to get some help on making a book (p.s, I’m 11.)

  • @PEGGLORE
    @PEGGLORE Před 3 měsíci

    My true story I have to write is naturally the most suspenseful story. I've had an event happen that's never happened in the world to anyone before. Readers have no choice but to keep turning the pages and find out what happened. Most of my story sounds untrue, but is all true. Interesting new concept for a book I have. Should be a Bestseller when written. Deserves to be.

  • @annmanzo
    @annmanzo Před 3 lety +2

    All of your videos are so enlightening. My question is the three examples are in first person. Are there any best sellers written in third person that ad suspense?

    • @AlyssaMatesic
      @AlyssaMatesic  Před 3 lety +1

      The passage from the second example (Where the Crawdads Sing) is in third person! But this is a great catch because I do naturally gravitate toward first-person novels. You can build suspense just as effectively in third-person.

    • @annmanzo
      @annmanzo Před 3 lety

      @@AlyssaMatesic Thank you and I missed that about Where the Crawdads Sing.

  • @queentali1994
    @queentali1994 Před 3 lety

    Is there a way for you to explain it to someone who has dyslexia? I’d like to add this into my writing but I don’t full understand how to do it.

  • @davidgoodwin-ef7si
    @davidgoodwin-ef7si Před 2 měsíci

    Do you edit and look at movie scripts or plys?

  • @jwstanley2645
    @jwstanley2645 Před 3 měsíci

    I have often thought of this as mystery. Mystery is not necessarily a story about a fictional murder or death. We hear of mysteries of science, history, and more. In 1939, Winston Churchill applied it to international politics. "I cannot forecast to you the action of Russia. It is a riddle, wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma; but perhaps there is a key. That key is Russian national interest." A mystery is also not a simple unknown. I have no idea what I ate for dinner this day last month. That is not a mystery because I do not care, nor does anyone else. A mystery is an unknown, which someone cares about, even needs to know. It is a compelling unknown. Thus, the suspense of a good book, it seems, must put together, one or more characters the reader cares about, and an unknown the reader cares enough to spend the time turning pages to find out. The third thing, I suspect, that drives the reader to more than finish is this. In order to read most novels, the reader must exit their daily life and enter the world (not necessarily some Sci-Fi or fantasy world) then return to daily life. The question then is this. Is my world or life changed by having spent time inside this book? Do I see my world differently or better? Do I see anything differently or better? Do I see my people differently or better? Do I see myself differently or better? Am I different or better? At least that is my non-commercial and personal opinion.

  • @rjmacready8830
    @rjmacready8830 Před 2 lety +5

    There's a fourth way to build and maintain suspense. I'll tell you all about it tomorrow.

  • @monicatravis8507
    @monicatravis8507 Před rokem

    All day ❤

  • @davidgagnon5581
    @davidgagnon5581 Před 2 lety

    As a writer it is my job to write better letters that will help readers read letters. This is about the comment I will leave that tells what I am thinking but first I will go over what makes a good comment in my opinion. After that I will explain my comments meaning & how you can better understand what's being said

  • @bintube5269
    @bintube5269 Před 4 měsíci

    This just makes me want to use some “cheesy tactics” 🥺

  • @southlondon86
    @southlondon86 Před 3 měsíci

    Madam would starting off a novel with a great inciting incident then flashing back to the past and building up to that event (and beyond) work? I have had mixed responses. A book editor I know told me it works fine but my mentor thinks it is too jarring to throw the reader in to that situation. The inciting incident ends on a cliffhanger so it naturally induces the reader to want to carry on reading but I don’t know if it’s too much to start off with. (I’m writing a science fiction fantasy)

  • @sarahspence9281
    @sarahspence9281 Před 25 dny

    Can you have an intense few chapters followed vy a calm period before the ultimate climax ? Or are you supposed to keep the pressure on throughout ??

  • @sin3358
    @sin3358 Před 2 lety +3

    Oof, I'm not a writer nor planning to write however that part of how writing "she didn't know what was coming next" being overused is so true and it really bothers me because I see it being used so often and makes my eyes roll out a lot, however I've seen these award winning books have them and it makes me be put off by the authors creativity because I'd expect someone who won an award for their book/s to know better than just write down that suspense is coming. I'll continue reading the book but with a lower rating

    • @AlyssaMatesic
      @AlyssaMatesic  Před 2 lety

      A cliche is a cliche, no matter who writes it! Thanks for commenting :)

  • @Shubham-xz2dx
    @Shubham-xz2dx Před 3 lety +1

    This question is not related to this video but I wanted to ask it on your latest video. You mentioned in a previous video the various rights that you give a publisher for your book - "Right to distribute worldwide, turn into an audiobook, etc ". I wanted to ask that if the book is to be turned into a film the are those rights also with the publisher or are they with the author?

    • @AlyssaMatesic
      @AlyssaMatesic  Před 3 lety +1

      The author/agent will sell the film rights separately!

    • @Shubham-xz2dx
      @Shubham-xz2dx Před 3 lety

      @@AlyssaMatesic Thank You!

    • @VickiWeavil
      @VickiWeavil Před 2 lety

      @@AlyssaMatesic Not always. It depends upon your contract.

  • @KyrstOak
    @KyrstOak Před rokem +1

    6:48 That's the third time you've said that.

  • @user-lq9oi5jq3n
    @user-lq9oi5jq3n Před 8 měsíci

    Okay

  • @leohlaslish9660
    @leohlaslish9660 Před 2 lety +1

    Sound more like intrigue to me

  • @kit888
    @kit888 Před 3 lety +5

    Brandon Sanderson breaks it up into promise, progress, and payoff.

  • @floogelhornzzz4770
    @floogelhornzzz4770 Před 7 měsíci

    I once read this same advice long ago, but this writer put it: Make the reader want to know "What happens next?"

  • @tophat2115
    @tophat2115 Před rokem

    goal->conflict-> disaster followed by reaction-dilemma->decision

  • @OsculumTormentum
    @OsculumTormentum Před 11 měsíci

    Poetry in story writing is a nice bonus, but a interesting story needs no poetry.

  • @qaswedfr1234
    @qaswedfr1234 Před měsícem

    exciting curiosity

  • @samp4050
    @samp4050 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I think literary agents are probably the only people who are actually allowed to read in their jobs. 😅

  • @richardferguson9836
    @richardferguson9836 Před 2 lety +9

    If writers in the past followed all the "how to become a best seller" advice (not over 100,000 words, too many characters, too much description, too complicated, show don't tell, write what you know, throw in hooks, hooks, hooks, shorten, simplify, suspense, suspense, suspense for short attention spans, etc. etc. etc.) there would be no Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Dickens, Eliot, Melville, Hugo, Mann, and all the other great writers whose books will far outlive the shallow dreck out there today.

    • @stephenbarone4053
      @stephenbarone4053 Před rokem

      Thank you for posting this. I always think the same thing. Granted, the rest of us may not be as fortunate to ignore the rules.

    • @tibbar1000
      @tibbar1000 Před rokem +1

      I agree. Sadly, a lot of those great works would never get published today. Whether we like it or not the publishers understand the target audience. Hemingway would starve in the current market.

  • @adityavaidya_1
    @adityavaidya_1 Před 3 lety +1

    I think what you mean is 'INTRIUGE'. Am I not right, Alyssa?

    • @AlyssaMatesic
      @AlyssaMatesic  Před 3 lety

      Intrigue and suspense are certainly intertwined, so that's a great point!

  • @StatmanRN
    @StatmanRN Před rokem

    So, how do you keep the reader in suspense?
    ...
    ...
    ...
    Im not sure if Id call it suspense as much as inspiring story questions that make the readers want to know more, bringing them into the story
    Hitchcock explained the bomb theory of suspense. A bomb suddenly going off my surprise the reader as much as the characters, but letting the reader know there is a bob before the characters know ratchets up suspense and tension

  • @diamonddragonstale
    @diamonddragonstale Před 3 lety +1

    Definitely a tough one, but if we HAD to 'sum it up', we'd simply note: immersion.
    To extrapolate even a tiny bit, we think this comes from building the world of the story. Mood, flavor, pacing (and when the pacing changes from slow to fast, and vice-versa). All of that can lead to emotional connection, which is at the core of every strong piece of writing, cinema, poetry, etc.
    No connection = who cares how 'awesome' one's characters look, read, speak or feel.

  • @admiral_red_shirt
    @admiral_red_shirt Před 2 lety

    I think it's a little confusing to use story pacing with suspense, which is a genre all its own.

    • @tamjg
      @tamjg Před rokem

      A less confusing term is tension or micro-tension.

  • @iosyntropy
    @iosyntropy Před rokem

    that crawdads sing snippet was just an author being purposely difficult. when i learned the author may as well have been the protagonist (an 80 year old woman) i realized, she wasnt being difficult, shes just much smarter than i am

  • @HaitianSam24
    @HaitianSam24 Před rokem

    Hey Alyssa I'm currently self published my first novel Genmist Goes To Brooklyn by Samuel L.Charles it's a Science fiction novel about aliens taking over the planet earth but a band of street smart kids from Brooklyn make friends with the alien Prince who fight for humanity because of the bond he has with the teenagers. The reason why I'm looking for a agent is because I written this book while I was in prison. I was housed in solitary confinement I grew up in the system in street's. There's no other fiction author like me I believe , I been googling in haven't found another fantasy author like me. I can change so many lives in show them people from the urban community can make but mostly ex-felons please help me by pointing me in the right direction......I promise you I will definitely change alot of people life if my life story is told.

  • @gusmore26
    @gusmore26 Před 2 lety +2

    Delete the first two question sentences, then slightly edit the third sentence: "The sun has come up and I'm sitting by a window that is foggily bereft with the breath of a life gone by." We all, at any age, have foggy minded days - a lifetime of to much fog deserves "bereft", and more than its meaning - that word provides poetic prose elements when placed near the word "breath". The sixth and seventh sentences can be made into one by deleting the first 5 words of sentence seven and continuing sentence six, slightly edited, at "...and despite accepting my own age,..." The rest of the paragraph is fine.

  • @user-te1wq4hf1b
    @user-te1wq4hf1b Před 3 měsíci +1

    Come to africa plz