JaxRhapsody
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- Sep 14, 2011
- Posts
- 2,195
Something I've been wondering about; how do you guys do your chapters? Page, number, wordcount? I make mine exactly or roughly four msword pages long, which is like one lit page.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
The length of my chapters is determined by the content. Chapters shouldn't be just cut every so many words. They have a content arch and should usually end in a way that the action propels the reader into the next chapter. That said, before the era of e-publishing, standard print book chapters lengths for fiction were considered to be 5,000 words unless something in the content determined a different length. Now, even in print, they are "whatever." There are a lot of 700-word chapters in thrillers today.
Something I've been wondering about; how do you guys do your chapters? Page, number, wordcount? I make mine exactly or roughly four msword pages long, which is like one lit page.
I try to make chapters over 7500 words long so they will spill over to three Literotica pages. Longer chapters are better received at Literotica than 1 page chapters, so I figure if it's a long story I may as well publish in longer chapters to get a better reception.
I always publish all chapters in a story to the same category, so I also try to make sure that every chapter offers what that category requires. If it's an Anal story, for example, then every chapter will have anal activity.
I also try to make sure every chapter is long enough to tell a story arc that is complete in itself, even if it's part of a whole. So each chapter has a character with something to do, a buildup, and sexual activity that represents both the sexual and dramatic high point of that chapter.
I'd never start a new chapter that broke up a scene underway.
I don't think the OP is talking about Lit chapters. I have several 'Books' that have been split up and submitted as parts with Chapter headings within the Part submitted. I think that is what the OP is talking about.
Personally, I try to keep them with in the scope of the what part of the story I'm trying to tell, yet sometimes you just have to give the reader a break at some point. Now I do have chapters that are then broken up into scenes as the POV might change within the Chapter.
Yep, and I do this. like mini cliff hangers to keep you turning/scrolling the pages.Oh, the mainstream does this all of the time and there's no reason you wouldn't, as it falls in with the standard "end the chapter on a note that propels the reader into the next chapter." Thus, it's common, especially in thrillers, to end a chapter at the height of a dangerous situation and pick the action up immediately in the next chapter. Otherwise, it's standard, as already noted to do the break by changes in the scene or time/date.
As usual, "chapter" here is confusing
I have 'chaptered' stories - where I release separate submissions that are numbered ("Ch 01", 02, ...). For me, these are however long they need to be to tell "their" part of the much larger story. They need to be sort of standalone, in that a reader won't be utterly lost and there is a beginning, middle and end. But, well, it's "Ch 03" so you won't be totally satisfied unless you've read 01 and 02. For me, my current chaptered work each individual chapter is 15,000-20,000 words (I ignore MS Word or Google Doc 'pages' because I double-space and use a larger font to make editing easier so page count is useless as a metric. Only Lit pages and that's easy to derive from word count.)
I do generally use what I call 'sections' within stories, if the OP means this by 'chapter,' yeah, I get it. For these, they are as long as they need to be. I do most work in 3rd-person limited and will use chapter/section breaks to switch PoV, in many cases in the middle of a scene. There is no word count target for me. It's driven by the story and which and how many PoVs I want on what's happening.