How to Control the Pace in Your Writing


by Jane Sumerset - Date: 2010-01-20 - Word Count: 546 Share This!

In order to make your writing good and effective, each sentence must vary lengths which control the pace of the story. Did you know that long sentences can create a flow which carries your readers? And on the other hand, short sentences slow the pace of your writing.

Since the pace usually involves in your story, you need to have a full control on how are you going to use sentence length in order to create rhythm and style of your story. You can set the pace with the help of your sentence lengths. You need to be guided for you to be able to control the pace in your story.

First of all, you need to study the writing that has an effective pace. You need to count each word in your sentences. Observe all punctuation marks that you use in your writings.

It needs to be analyzed properly. In order to do this, count the total number of words in every 20 sentences you have and divide it by 20 in order to get the average number of words in every sentence.

Vary the length of your sentences and add ups some suspense in your writing. Avoid long sentences as much as possible. Monitor the pace that had occurred in your story.

Pacing is the tool that allows writers to fashion the speed at which their texts are going to be read. Whether you need the reader to blast past to leave them breathless or you want them to go slowly to settle down, your ability to integrate pacing into your writing will allow you to make it happen.

When To Add Pacing
Writers who already have a clear idea of what they want to do with the piece can integrate pacing right in the thick of the writing process. Others, however, like me, prefer to consciously look to add it during editing. Whichever of these two styles will suit you should depend on your writing preferences.

If you like to have a detailed outline before writing, for instance, the areas that need to paced are probably already obvious to you as you read through your outline. As such, it makes sense to consciously have it in mind even as you do your first draft.

For most writers, consciously altering the pace is an activity best performed after fashioning your first draft, either before or after you've ran the writing through your English grammar software. Once you've written the piece, read through it aloud, trying to find which places could use a faster pace and which ones could use a little more simmer.

How To Add Pacing

If you need to slow a piece down, look towards adding descriptive segments that detail the environment, the setting and other similar content that provides the reader with a break in the action. You can also add redundancy, returning to a previously-made reference, to slow it down. Flashbacks are also good ways to slow down the pace, especially those based on memories or recollections.

For speeding up the material, a rapid-fire dialogue is easily one of the best techniques to use. For less-narrative based writing, you can rattle off using short, bulleted points. Additionally, make sure to remove all parts that don't have to do directly with the action or dialogue, as they tend to weigh down the pace.


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