What Great Novels Do in EVERY Scene (And Yours Should too) | Writing Advice

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  • @rociomiranda5684
    @rociomiranda5684 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Moby Whale is an exquisite epic of mythological cosmic proportions, poetic, powerful. There is no book to touch it in the world. I wish I could tell Melville he didn't fail.

    • @hardnewstakenharder
      @hardnewstakenharder หลายเดือนก่อน

      It really is an English language GOAT. If on a Winter's Night a Traveler comes close, and that's in Italian.

  • @joshuam2212
    @joshuam2212 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +37

    a fun fact the book you were talking about was a total flop in its own time and the writer never recovered writing career and now it is a classic funny how that works

    • @tehufn
      @tehufn 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      It's still kind of considered a bit of a slog though due in part to its length.

    • @hardnewstakenharder
      @hardnewstakenharder หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@tehufnI picked it up in 2023 and couldn't put it down. It's INCREDIBLE. What a majestic novel.

  • @fragwagon
    @fragwagon 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +21

    Moby Richard is a classic.

  • @bennobenny750
    @bennobenny750 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +16

    I watched Silence of the Lamb recently, and I noticed this technic being used - every scene felt like a mini story leading to the next one.

  • @tehufn
    @tehufn 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +10

    This is an interesting technique, and helps me explain what was so engaging in my first manuscript that my second novel's early draft lacked. I saw my first novel as a lot more episodic, but I think this is a better way to put it and it might help my edit.
    That said, I don't think every single scene or chapter needs to be written this way, nor should it. A lot of Tolstoy's Anna Karenina is made up of chapters that could be described as fragments of a scene. It's the prose and emotion that holds engagement.
    That said, Anna Karenina has plenty of scenes that follow this video's idea and have their own complete emotional story arc. I'm going to have to keep an eye out for scene-level story arcs in my future reading.

  • @frankhainke7442
    @frankhainke7442 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    So it should be fractal. Well, this is something Bach and Beethoven and Mozart and others did as well.

  • @andreasboe4509
    @andreasboe4509 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +8

    Great episode. I will watch it a second time now.

  • @sarahalbert6833
    @sarahalbert6833 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

    I love your humour! Your videos brighten my day. Especially when I'm having a day where everything I write seems terrible 😁

  • @clickbaitcabaret8208
    @clickbaitcabaret8208 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Melville's on my short list of must read classics.

  • @MrNoucfeanor
    @MrNoucfeanor 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Moby wood was great!
    Your info is greatly informative. Thank you!

    • @duncanosis6773
      @duncanosis6773  2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Glad it was helpful!

  • @haraldcarlsten6238
    @haraldcarlsten6238 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    Great view on writing. The relevance bit. But there is also this with melody, sound and the intrinsic poetry of the words. I think that is lost a lot in today's fiction. Especially in genre fiction but also in higher fiction.

  • @DreamsOfFire
    @DreamsOfFire 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Great video! Although the start gave me trauma flashbacks to the time I called the nooood model (his name was Moby) for our figure drawing class the full name of that book by accident. 😅

  • @mdavidmullins
    @mdavidmullins หลายเดือนก่อน

    I agree but Mamet doesn't. His saying is that the nail is not the house, meaning that the individual parts comprising the house don't look like a house. Mamet might be the exception that proves the rule here. It would be an interesting discussion to analyze the books (and plays and films) that don't follow this fractal pattern.

  • @tamjg
    @tamjg 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Hi Carl, do you also do professional beta reading or developmental editing?

  • @GrandTeuton
    @GrandTeuton 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    What could make it one's favourite scene? A jar of pickles? A hand plane? One never knows.

  • @nevilleattkins586
    @nevilleattkins586 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Nobody reads books, so if your plot only exists at the level of the book , then it doesn't have a plot at all. This is the effect of reading Morte D'arthur , its got plot stuck up high, the scenes, particularly the battle scenes are one damned thing after another. What do people read? scenes, hopefully one after another but just because you've read the first scene, there is NO reason that the reader will keep reading, its not TV or cinema, so the author must not assume that they can take the readers continued interest for granted and relegate the story to some kind of meta arc comprised of beats , instead each scene should have everything in it. There is reason why there is no Mody Dick 2 or The Triall (this time it's personal) or Ulysees - the next day (really enjoying these). Because at every moment everything is at stake , nothing assumed or if it is its to disastrous effect (see the whole of Thomas Hardy) . In short novels are fractal like in composition. How do I know this? One scene of a Thomas Hardy novel provided enough material for a whole my MA dissertation.

  • @phooter-boy6157
    @phooter-boy6157 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Too scared to say the books title.🐱

  • @TedMattos
    @TedMattos 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Now I want to create a short story of a contractor who struggles getting some masonry to work due to one piece.
    The contractor: Ismael, the piece of masonry: Moby Brick.

    • @duncanosis6773
      @duncanosis6773  2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Yes, one big jagged white brick that a bunch of people have seen but no one can find!

  • @mdavidmullins
    @mdavidmullins หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Dick Tracy? Dick Clark? Dick Nixon? All the famous Dicks in the world. Dick's Sporting Goods. Dick Van Dyke. (A possible double-whammy on that one.) Surely Google has been around long enough to figure out that it exists in an ambiguous world of many meanings, the fabric of the universe the weave of Joseph's many-colored coat. Time for AI to get smarter.

  • @vasylin77
    @vasylin77 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    examples???