A. E. Van Vogt on John W. Gallishaw's rules for Writing
a synopsis by L J Hurst
Write a story in scenes of about 800 words, which procedes through five
stages:
- Let the reader know the location of the scene
- Establish the purpose of the main character
or the purpose of that scene
- The interaction of his trying to accomplish that purpose
- Make it clear: did he or did he not accomplish that purpose
- In all the early scenes: no matter whether he achieves that purpose
or not, things are going to get worse
Every type of story has its own type of fictional sentence
- 'confession' stories have to have emotion in every sentence
- in science fiction you have to have a little bit of a 'hangup' in each
sentence: the author furnishes information, but each sentence in itself has
a little hangup in it
This information comes from Charles Platt's interview with A. E. Van Vogt, in WHO WRITES SCIENCE FICTION (Savoy Books)