The Tension Interview with Steven Wedel, He Who Writes Erotic Werewolf Novels and So Much More
Write Better Now
I interviewed author Steven Wedel, and my cowriter for a couple of books, about where all his writing tension comes from. At first he said his daughter cell phone bills, but then he got all charming and agreed to the interview.
What Steve’s website says about him is :
I was born in Stillwater, Okla., in 1966 and we moved to Enid, Okla. about a year later. Some of my earliest memories are of watching The Foreman Scotty Show on a black-and-white TV and winning a call-in contest on the show; the prize was a T.G.&Y. gift certificate. I played in the dirt a lot and had a fire engine peddle car I rode like hell on our back patio.
Somewhere back then, I recall my mom and aunt letting me watch Hitchcock’s “The Birds.” That scared me a lot.
Steve is the author of a bunch of scary books, mostly about werewolves and people.
So, Steve, what do you do to build tension in a scene?
I always come at my writing from a character-first perspective. So, for me, tension comes from creating a character readers really care about. My stories typically start kind of slow because I'm developing the lead character(s). I also write from the POV of the antagonist (keeping in mind that he's the hero of his own story). This way, the reader sees the goals of both the antagonist and protagonist and can watch as they come closer and closer to confrontation.
Is it a big bang shock sort of technique for you or you more fond of the taking the reader down the dark and sinister hallway?**
Always go down the dark and sinister hallway! Hopefully there's a big bang shock at the end of it. When I teach my Writing Horror class at the local vo-tech we spend a lot of time comparing Friday the 13th to The Exorcist. In the Friday movies, all you get is the big bang shock. One after another, characters you don't care about are killed in creative and gruesome ways. In The Exorcist, you see Regan, her mom, and Father Karras in their normal lives. You come to like them before the evil invades their lives. When it does, it starts slowly, with noises in the attic, a quiet conversation about the loss of faith, etc. By the time of the final showdown, you really know these people and are deeply emotionally invested in their well-being.
Do you think that it's easier to build tension in first or third person? And either way, as a reader (not as a writer), which do you prefer?
Hmm. That's a tough one. In many regards, I think it's easier to build tension in third person simply because if it's told in first person the reader assumes the character telling the story lives. Also, because you can jump heads and show the motivation of the antagonist. That's something you can't do so well in first person because the reader can only see what that one character sees, only know what that one character knows. As a reader, I love the intimacy of the first person narrative, though.
If you think of suspense coming in different sizes (small, medium, super-ultra large), do you think it's best to alternate these or are you into the steady diet of massive (or tiny) suspenses in your book?
I think of it as dating. Let's say the goal is, umm ... the honeymoon night activity. There are stages you go through in getting there.
"If I try to hold her hand, will she pull away and tell me how gross I am and how she'll kill me if I ever touch her again?"
He thinks about that, stews about it, starts to do it, but she suddenly has an itch and her hand is gone.
He waits, waits, waits, then tries again. Success! She looks at him and smiles. Later, he wants to kiss her. The stakes are higher, so he'll have to think about that one longer. After all, his breath probably stinks, he's never kissed anyone before, doesn't know how to form his lips, when to use his tongue, how long to hold the kiss, all that. But then it simply happens and it's fantastic and you release a little of that tension. There are smaller goals, medium goals and that super-ultra large goal waiting at the end of the story.
When you write do you think the nature of your suspense comes from your characters or from the plot?
What? Are you my wife? You haven't listened to a word I've said, have you? Well, I have that affect on women.* Ya'll just tune me out. I'm like the checkbook trying to say, "Do you really need another pair of shoes?" when you're already at Shoe Carnival.
Plot is important, of course. You have to have something going on. This is why I don't get into much "mainstream" literature. Too often, nothing really happens. Interesting people become boring if all they do is veg in front of the TV. Something has to be going on in their lives, and they have to react, anticipate, and act to shape the course of those events.
Last night I finished this new book where nobody was killed, the foundation of the planet wasn't threatened, and no ship capsized to kill hundreds, but a lot happened to this one fascinating young girl who was writing letters to John Wayne. In the grand scheme of things, what was going on with her was pretty small potatoes, but in her world the events were huge. That's what's important. It was completely believable that Lily became a "girl hero" in the context of her story, but she wasn't going to be defusing atomic bombs in that story. The plot will grow out of the characters.****
I've tried developing stories where the plot is more important and I end up with cardboard cutout characters that are just moved across the board like the little plastic pegs in the little plastic cars in the Life game.
Steve, you are awesome! Thank you so much!
*Reader, he does NOT have this affect on women. It is the opposite. I swear to you.
** Reader, we talk about these techniques in an earlier post.
*** Reader, does it annoy you to be called reader? If I sent you strudel would it make it better
**** This is my book he's referring to. Steve is nice like that.
WRITING EXERCISE
Imagine that you’re a podcast host or something similar and you’re interviewing your character. Write down the script for this conversation.
PLACE TO SUBMIT
The FSG (Farrar Straus & Giroux) Writer’s Fellowship (Deadline April 3)
The FSG Writer’s Fellowship is a yearlong program designed to give an emerging writer from an underrepresented community additional resources to build a life around writing: funding, editorial guidance, and advice on how to forge a writing career. It offers the unique opportunity for a writer to spend time with and enjoy the support and mentorship of the FSG community.
The Fellowship runs from September 2023 to August 2024 and will award the recipient with $15,000 paid over two installments: half paid at the start of the Fellowship program, half paid in February 2024. The Fellow agrees to offer to FSG the Fellow’s first book-length work before submitting to, or soliciting offers from, any other publisher. The fellowship celebrates the spirit of the FSG list and its commitment to invention, curiosity, and extending the limits of literature.
LINKS THIS PAST WEEK
Novel Retreats to Inspire You via Kirkus
A Newsweek article on writing and memoir and jail.