MelissaBaby
Wordy Bitch
- Joined
- Jun 8, 2017
- Posts
- 7,624
Umm... Write a better story?
Yeah, I'd like to make some substantive contribution here, but I am forced to fall back on Melissa's Principle: Write better stories, get better results.
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Umm... Write a better story?
The easy answer is to start in media res. I despise it because it feels not only like a cheap trick but basically like straight-up cheating. It gets the reader invested into the scene, only to pull over to a screeching halt when you finally get the end and realize that this was just a teaser before we get to the "real" story. What follows after is usually a vulgar info dump of raw exposition, since the author feels like he "earned it" by essentially reordering two scenes from the draft and adding a few sentences of perfunctory glue.
Why? 78.329% of all stats are made up on the spot. I read it on the internet.![]()
I think you're overlooking a few important factors.
I'm sure you're both right, and you make interesting and valid points. But better discussed in a thread about the stats, rather than a discussion about writing craft.The votes/view ratio isn't constant. It's higher when a story is new than it is when a story has been around for a month+. If you look at the average over time, then the ratio gradually drops. The ratio can also change substantially for short periods of time after you post a new story.
This is where I stopped reading. I was hoping for more stats.
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So what do you do as writers to hold that attention beyond the first couple of paragraphs?
Hey, you opened with a humblebrag, you gotta be prepared for reciprocal humblebrags!I'm sure you're both right, and you make interesting and valid points. But better discussed in a thread about the stats, rather than a discussion about writing craft.
Maybe talk to Bamagan:
Edit: I'm not trying to crap on your replies. But we all know how quickly threads can get sidetracked, and I'd rather keep this focused on positive writing advice than becoming an argument about statistics.
I find it hard to use "views" for anything quantitative. Views are a measure of traffic, and nothing more. To get from a view to a vote, the process is like: open the story->read->form an opinion->vote. There are too many hurdles between opening the story (a view) and casting a vote. It's hard to expect a very meaningful relationship between them.
I am reminded of the line from the legendary cricket commentator Brian Johnstone, "the bowler's Holding, the batsman's Willey".I originally thought about calling the thread "Holding the reader's attention". I suspect it would have about three replies by now.
I have three series, two EV and one EC, averaging over 4.5.First bit of advice - unless you're publishing in SF&F, don't publish a series. Just don't. You don't get the views that you would get with a stand-alone story, and every chapter is an opportunity for the reader to stop reading.
I suggest you try this experiment - take one of your series down and republish it as a stand-alone story. I think you'll like the results, but I could be wrong.I have three series, two EV and one EC, averaging over 4.5.
The irony is that if you do make the reader finish, they're less likely to finish.Making the reader finish
Relieved to find that this thread is not about my initial assumption.
How much of a variance do others see in votes/view by category.
But not zebras … yet.And this thread merges with the discussion of strokers.
You have a pretty remarkable catalog. I'm going to have to find out how you get a 4.8 in LW.Interesting question. My view-to-vote ratio seems relatively consistent across categories.
Overall: 29:1
Non-Human: 22:1
Non-Erotic: 23:1
Loving Wives: 29:1
Romance: 30:1
Humor: 30:1
Erotic Horror: 37:1
This is based on a sample size of 9 stories (487,538 total views / 16,928 total votes).
For mine:Interesting question. My view-to-vote ratio seems relatively consistent across categories.
Overall: 29:1
Non-Human: 22:1
Non-Erotic: 23:1
Loving Wives: 29:1
Romance: 30:1
Humor: 30:1
Erotic Horror: 37:1
This is based on a sample size of 9 stories (487,538 total views / 16,928 total votes).
You have a pretty remarkable catalog. I'm going to have to find out how you get a 4.8 in LW.
I don’t know that I do anything to engage the reader, save for maybe putting a bit of effort into the first paragraph.But what do you do to engage your reader?
I feel like this is a much more practical corollary to my overly abstract answer. Lots of great examples.I think of a story as a series of mini-mysteries or questions. The desire to know the answers to those questions drives the reader forward. They can be small questions, but they have to make the reader wonder "and then what"?
I generally try to avoid using examples from my own work, but I'll do so here because it's what I'm most familiar with. My story Abandoned starts with this sentence:
"I'd seen some weird shit inside abandoned storage units, but what I saw that night in November took the cake. By a mile."
That's the initial hook. What did he find? The answer comes a few paragraphs later: a coffin. This immediately raises new questions. What's it doing there? Is it empty? Will he open it?
More answers come soon after. There's a young woman inside wearing a dress straight out of Bridgerton that's splattered with mud. (Who is she? What's she doing there?)
She claims she's a vampire. (Is she really?) He takes her photo with his phone. She doesn't show up in it. (Is she going to hurt him?)
The narrator tells her that he's there to clear out the storage unit because the owner hasn't paid rent. She rails against an unnamed character for lying and saying she'd be able to stay there as long as she wanted. She smashes her coffin. (Who is this new person? What did he do to her? What's she going to do without a coffin?)
After some awkward back-and-forth, the narrator invites her to stay with him until she finds a new place. She accepts. (Is this a good idea? Is the damsel-in-distress act all a ruse?)
That's the opening scene. In each subsequent scene, I try to establish additional questions with the hope that the reader will want to keep going to find the answers.
Another thing I've found that keeps readers engaged is humor. I tried to inject some humor into the opening scene of Abandoned, and judging from reader response, it went a long way toward getting readers to identify with the characters and make them feel like real people.
As a reader, if you can make me smile or chuckle at something a character says, I'm pretty much yours until the end. I try my best to keep that in mind when I'm writing.
The irony is that if you do make the reader finish, they're less likely to finish.
I'm not sure how making the reader Finnish affects either of those.