JPC Allen

Welcome to my writing pages!  The main focus of this website is to offer writing tips, prompts, and inspiration to writers, no matter what their genre or skill level. You’ll also find information on my published works and the ones in progress. My schedule for posting is:

Monday Sparks: Writing prompts to fan your creative flame.

Thursdays – Writing tips based on a monthly theme

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Using Uncomfortable Settings to Develop Characters and Advance Plot

So what do I mean by using uncomfortable settings to develop characters and advance plot? The bedrock under this questions is tension–tension is the engine that propels readers from line to line, page to page, chapter to chapter. An effective way to created tension is to plunk your protagonist in a setting that makes him or her uncomfortable or uneasy. But how does this setting create tension, develop characters, and advance plot? Read on!

Creating Tension with Uncomfortable Settings

When we experience tension, we want to relieve it. Hence all the activities people engage in as stress-relievers. The same is true when reading fiction. When a reader experiences tension, she wants that tension relieves and there’s only two ways to do it: keep reading or set aside the book for good.

Placing your protagonist in a setting that makes them uncomfortable ignites questions in the readers’s mind: Why doesn’t the protagonist like where he is? Did something happen in his past? Are the people he usually find here a threat? What’s going on?

If readers are asking questions, that means they feel the tension. Most of the time, they will keep reading to answer their questions and relieve the tension.

Using Uncomfortable Settings to Develop Characters

Revealing what your protagonist doesn’t like is just as important as showing what he does like. For example, your protagonist goes to a very dingy bookstore in a sketchy part of the city. As soon as she enters the store, her thoughts reveal she is uncomfortable. In this situation, an author could introduce some backstory if her discomfort comes from an event in her past. Or she could remember unsavory rumors she’s heard about this bookstore. And yet she’s come anyway. Or the author can make it very clear that the reason the protagonist is uneasy is because of her history with the owner. All these explanations create tension and reveal something important about the main character.

Using Uncomfortable Settings to Advance the Plot

Once you’ve established your protagonist finds a setting uncomfortable, you have to explain why she is facing this setting. Using the example above, the protagonist doesn’t like this part of the city because it’s the poor part her family escaped from years ago. So why is she here? She believes the unsavory rumors she’s heard about the bookstore. So why did she come? The owner is the grandfather who disowned her mother. So why did she come?

All those why questions concern plot. As you write the scene, you can hint at the answer, perpetuating or increasing the tension. Or you can plainly answer it, but that plain answer not only releases the first tension but creates a new one.

For example, the girl visiting the bookstore owned by her estranged grandfather states why she’s come: her mother has disappeared and the cops think she’s just abandoned her. But the girl thinks some harm has come to her mom and she’s asking the only other relative she has for help. So I’ve relieved the first tension and created a second one.

What settings make you uncomfortable? If you’re a writer, how would you use them in a story?

Use Immersive Settings to Hook Readers and Transform Your Novel

Settings are the overlooked stepsister to characters and plot, and they shouldn’t be. Your selection and description of settings are just as important as the development of characters and plot. If your characters and plot aren’t grounded in a setting, then you don’t have a story. You have dialogue and action, but readers have no frame within which to reference them. Below are three ways to use immersive settings to hook readers and transform your novel.

What do I mean by immersive settings?

These are settings that are described so effectively, that paint such vivid word pictures, that readers feel they are actually experiencing the story along with the POV character. Those kind of settings hook readers and keep them turning pages.

But how do I write immersive settings?

Evoke the five senses. Take a look at a scene you’ve written. What senses have you used to describe it? You don’t, and usually you shouldn’t, use all five senses in every scene. But choose more than just sight for readers to imagine the scene the characters are inhabiting.

What’s the mood? What mood do you want to convey to readers? What is the mood of your POV character in a particular scene? The mood will determine what senses you choose to describe the scene as well as specific words.

For example, my teen sleuth Rae Riley hates hospitals. She visited too many of them while her mother battled a losing fight with cancer. Since Rae is my POV character, I will choose senses and descriptions that show readers Rae’s opinion of hospitals. Here’s an excerpt from A Riddle in the Lonesome October. Rae and her dad are accompanying Rae’s cousin Amber to see her father in ICU as he fights for his life after a riding accident:

Amber shrank into herself as we made our way through the maze that all hospitals adopted as their floor plan. Even if the color scheme was different from the hospitals in North Carolina, the miles of dead white light made it look the same. 

In the elevator, Dad put his arm around Amber, and she leaned into him, her breathing loud. 

I swallowed for about the hundredth time, trying to ignore the antiseptic stench that permeated every inch of every hospital I’d ever been in. 

Now a character who sees hospitals and medical procedures in a positive way might describe this journey to the ICU in more hopeful words, such as the smell was clean or refreshing. Instead of feeling like she’s lost in a maze, she notices the precision and industry of the nurses and staff she walks past.

Limit your description to make the most impact. One of the best pieces of advice I’ve received on describing settings came from romantic suspense author DiAnn Mills. She said that when you invite someone into your home for the first time, you don’t overwhelm them with a history of how you acquired each piece of furniture in your living room. You’d only discuss the items they showed an interest in.

In a similar way, you only describe what a reader needs to orient themselves in a scene with the characters and experience it through their senses. But how do you know what readers need in each scene?

This takes a lot of work–reading novels similar to yours to see how other authors write immersive settings and then practicing the technique over and over in your own writing.

The best tip is to limit your descriptions to the few aspects of the setting that will impart the greatest impact. In the excerpt above, I decided that since Rae is an amateur photographer, she would notice the quality of the light in the hospital. Since smell is the strongest sense to evoke memories, I chose to use that sense to convey Rae’s discomfort in hospitals. Both the light and the smell quickly and clearly immerse readers not only in the setting they’re walking with Rae, but also immerse them in her mind.

Here are more tips on writing immersive scenes for your novel.

First Impression: What Scene Fits This Setting?

Since my theme this month for how to write a novel is how to write settings, I have a prompt that asks your first impression: what scene fits this setting? Without thinking much about it, what kind of scene would you place here? A meet-cute? An opening scene? A climax?

I won’t tamper with your first impression by stating here what came to my mind. Let me know how this photo inspires you!

Here are more writing prompts about settings.

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