Pacing for Your Readers – Don’t Leave Them Behind

Many years ago, I decided to join a marathon training program in San Francisco. I showed up at Golden Gate Park with barely-broken-in running shoes and even less broken-in legs, and they told us to run out of the park, down the coast, and back – three miles!  I thought I would die.  But I did it, very slowly, but I did it.  This run determined the pace at which I should train, and it put me into a group of other slow runners.

Each Saturday, I returned to the park for our ever-longer runs, and all of us got into our pace groups.  The trained runners took off and were out of sight before my group even got the first half-mile in, and sometimes I was jealous. Mostly, though, I was grateful to have our slow pace.  I am not built for running, and this pace was the only thing that let me keep going.

Pacing a story is much the same. You have to set the pace for the reader who has picked up your book.

Consider the Pace

When you’re setting the pace of your work, you need to think about a few things in order to help your reader move through your words with clarity, engagement, and steady interest.

How to Find the Pace

Writers can do a few simple things to learn about pacing.

Wise pacing won’t make up for a lack of strong desire in your protagonists, and it won’t cover up sloppy writing. But it can be the difference between a reader sticking with your book or putting it aside.  So consider it carefully.

And by the way, I didn’t finish the marathon despite the good training. But I did do a half-marathon at my own slow pace on the streets of gorgeous New Orleans, and because I was running at a way I could sustain, I got to really see that city in a way I might not have as a typical tourist. It was a true gift.

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