And I vaguely recall something syntactically similar. From an author I admire. Maybe ADF.
Hm. The author I'm currently editing for doesn't (typically) take it to that degree, but he tends toward shorter paragraphs, and while sometimes it's done for emphasis, other times it seems as though he feels as though he thinks he's supposed to insert a paragraph break anytime there's a shift in perspective. Especially where this has resulted in single-paragraph sentences, I've been encouraging him to merge them together, and pointing out that while single-sentence paragraphs can work for action or to emphasize things, the more you do it, the less impactful it becomes.
If by perspective you mean he's moving from one character's point of view to another, there should certainly be a break to help the reader follow... but why change perspective so often?
Well, in Coover's "The Babysitter," the changes of POV (escalating into changes of reality) were the whole point. But he did have paragraph breaks at every shift (and a shift at just about every paragraph break)If by perspective you mean he's moving from one character's point of view to another, there should certainly be a break to help the reader follow... but why change perspective so often?
Again, please excuse any poorly expressed thoughts here...this cold has given me unending sinus pressure for about a week now...Yeah... in modern writing convention, one generally sticks with a single character's POV within a scene, then inserts a break and starts a new scene to shift to a different character's POV.
Paragraph breaks are for shifts from one concept or subject to another, or from one character's dialogue to another. Perhaps DonIago meant a shift in focus/topic rather than a shift in character perspective?
but what I've found my author doing a few times is things like...
(three-sentence paragraph 'establishing shot' of new area)
(one-sentence paragraph of character reacting to seeing the new area)
While that's arguably a 'change in perspective' in the sense that it's going from establishing the area to getting inside one character's head to say what they think of the area that's been established, IMO in such a case a single-sentence paragraph probably isn't merited, and it makes just as much sense to add it to the end of the prior paragraph...or, perhaps better, restructure the paragraph to be entirely from that character's perspective.
Again, please excuse any poorly expressed thoughts here...this cold has given me unending sinus pressure for about a week now...
Thank you!I hope you're feeling better soon, DonIago.
Years ago I read a book about the Sherlock Holmes Canon (I think it was The Great Detective: The Amazing Rise and Immortal Life of Sherlock Holmes by Zach Dundas, but I no longer have my copy and can't double check) that made an interesting point I'd never considered before: The Sherlock Holmes stories became period pieces while Doyle was still writing them.Similarly, Sherlock Holmes and Dracula were not period pieces when first published. They were contemporary thrillers.
It's only modern audiences who associate them with gaslit nostalgia, and who may cry foul if the stories are updated to contemporary times.
Part of the reason that the BBC Sherlock series chose to film street scenes on North Gower Street instead of the modern day Baker Street is because of the sheer number of tourist spots with the Sherlock Holmes name on them that were visible on the real life Baker Street. It would've been too impractical to remove all that signage for location shoots.By making a series set in the present day but using the same characters/names, you create a world in which the original probably doesn't exist, and you avoid having everybody compare detective ________ who acts and thinks like Holmes to Holmes by name constantly. (e.g. "You're a regular Sherlock Holmes.")
By making a series set in the present day but using the same characters/names, you create a world in which the original probably doesn't exist, and you avoid having everybody compare detective ________ who acts and thinks like Holmes to Holmes by name constantly. (e.g. "You're a regular Sherlock Holmes.")
-- Signor Emanuel Ravelli (Leonard "Chico" Marx), Animal Crackers.You gotta use-a the Sherlock Holmes method.
Because the idea that an actual zombie apocalypse takes place in a reality in which zombie apocalypses are already a subgenre strains belief.
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