Queenfisher
Bird?
- Joined
- May 29, 2020
- Messages
- 333
- Points
- 108
This question is more or less something I've always been bothered with. I don't exactly understand what constitutes the bare minimum of forward progression in a single chapter of a story. More so here, trying to write a serial novel (something I'm a complete noob in and feel my overall experience suckage pretty hard). I just have no idea how to change my paradigm and understand what chapter-by-chapter forward progression is and what it isn't in a webnovel medium.
In my previous writing group (regular novels), even the average chapter length was a bit higher than the average I see here. And my critique buddies were not very pleased when the chapter didn't have:
1) main plot progression event [if the subplot is currently on, then it has to tie in with the main plot somehow!],
2) foreshadowing and planting concepts for later usage,
3) character arc/development progression,
4) thematic development [the chapter has to be about something thematic rather than giving out bare events, and also tie into the main theme of the book],
5) the relationships between characters have to progress,
6) worldbuilding or setting has to be displayed for immersion,
7*) something baseline exciting [fanservice, action, comedy, fluff, erotica -- whatever works].
* -- is not forward progression per se (it doesn't move anything forward), but it definitely helps push the reader forward in the book. So while it's not necessary, it is a huge help!
All in all, that's... quite a lot even for a seasoned writer. But the average chapter length of 3,500 to 6,000 words could potentially allow all seven of those points to be addressed each chapter. The main plot progression was always paramount, though. And yet, when I sometimes browse most popular webnovels here and on other sites to see what the trends and conventions of the medium are, I'd say that the concept of "forward progression" seems to work quite a bit differently in serialized novels than in regular novels? Most of the time, even fulfilling one of things on the above list suffices for a chapter. And sometimes none at all. But that's understandable for the chapter lengths that are sufficiently shorter than what I've previously been taught to write!
(And is likely the main reason I struggle so hard with it for now. I need to relearn to conceptualize what makes a chapter).
I really want to get into this new paradigm because whatever it is, it seems to work well enough. But I really don't get what it is yet.
Help?
Thanks in advance ^^.
In my previous writing group (regular novels), even the average chapter length was a bit higher than the average I see here. And my critique buddies were not very pleased when the chapter didn't have:
1) main plot progression event [if the subplot is currently on, then it has to tie in with the main plot somehow!],
2) foreshadowing and planting concepts for later usage,
3) character arc/development progression,
4) thematic development [the chapter has to be about something thematic rather than giving out bare events, and also tie into the main theme of the book],
5) the relationships between characters have to progress,
6) worldbuilding or setting has to be displayed for immersion,
7*) something baseline exciting [fanservice, action, comedy, fluff, erotica -- whatever works].
* -- is not forward progression per se (it doesn't move anything forward), but it definitely helps push the reader forward in the book. So while it's not necessary, it is a huge help!
All in all, that's... quite a lot even for a seasoned writer. But the average chapter length of 3,500 to 6,000 words could potentially allow all seven of those points to be addressed each chapter. The main plot progression was always paramount, though. And yet, when I sometimes browse most popular webnovels here and on other sites to see what the trends and conventions of the medium are, I'd say that the concept of "forward progression" seems to work quite a bit differently in serialized novels than in regular novels? Most of the time, even fulfilling one of things on the above list suffices for a chapter. And sometimes none at all. But that's understandable for the chapter lengths that are sufficiently shorter than what I've previously been taught to write!
(And is likely the main reason I struggle so hard with it for now. I need to relearn to conceptualize what makes a chapter).
I really want to get into this new paradigm because whatever it is, it seems to work well enough. But I really don't get what it is yet.
Help?
Thanks in advance ^^.