Showing posts with label an involuntary writing class from an arquably underqualified blogger who wants to speak to you in detail about terms she invented herself. Show all posts
Showing posts with label an involuntary writing class from an arquably underqualified blogger who wants to speak to you in detail about terms she invented herself. Show all posts

Thursday, February 16, 2012

How I Learned to End A Story with a Minimal Amount of Bloodshed

When I was young, I had a constant struggle with story endings. My issues led me to create the following ill-advised rules:
1)    The story is not over until every character in it is dead.
2)    No one is allowed to read my story until it is absolutely finished.
I clung so stubbornly to my two Rules that if anyone managed to catch a quick glimpse of my current prose piece whilst any of the characters in it were still alive, I would consider the piece to be ruined. Devastated, I would take the pages of the now-defiled story to my room and tear it to bits.
Now, years later, I still cringe as I pass an unfinished story across the table for a colleague of mine to read, but I force myself to do it anyway. After all, I have learned to side with my characters. A reader’s opinion can save one of my ill-fated heroines from an untimely death when I’ve given up on other ending options.