Into the Fire

Passionate thoughts about the world of writing and the Power of God

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Over and over again in the writing world writers are reminded that conflict is the key element to sustaining story, to keep it moving, to make it desirable to the reader. And although I agree conflict is a key element, the degree of conflict varies tremendously with the genre.

Over and over again in the writing world writers are told to put their protagonists through the proverbial "hell" on earth, to continue to force him into one horrible situation after another. However, if you're talking love stories without the "star-crossed" or "unrequited love" circumstances, the type of conflict makes a major difference in the reality of the story. The simplicity of the formula in the romance genre (which differs from love stories) keeps the nature of the conflict element fairly simple. Man/woman fall for each other. Man/woman face obstacles. Man/woman are deterred or separated by these obstacles. Man/woman fail to overcome obstacles until . . . they overcome the obstacles and love prevails – simplified for sure but the fairly dependable plan and outcome for most romance novels. The eras might be different, the personality types of the characters, their locations, their social strata, their occupations, etc., all might be different, but the formula remains the same. And conflict is always present, but if the author chooses to be unrelenting with it in a romance novel, it can seem unrealistic and overbearing.

The conflict in well written thrillers is always intense and multi-layered. It continues throughout the story, amping up toward the end and only sometimes being perfectly resolved. In thrillers the protagonist is indeed put through the wringer. It's expected from page one. And acceptable within the genre.

Conflict is necessary to make a story interesting, but it can be overdone. And even wearisome if it seems like a device rather than an authentic storyline. Think about it. How much is necessary before the conflict seems overwritten? And overrated.

 

Jesus, you are the Prince of Peace, the mender of relationship between God and man, the absolver of conflict between humanity and the Father. You alone bring peace to our souls through your saving grace. Again, thank you is never enough. In the Name of Jesus, Amen. 

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4 responses to “Conflict is overrated.”

  1. BK Jackson Avatar
    BK Jackson

    Conflict seems even harder to write now that most people have the attention span of a gnat. Sometimes I’m thinking, “Can’t we at least see the normal world before the protag’s life is threatened?”

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  2. Nicole Avatar

    I agree, Brenda. For me the thriller genre is the only – or at least the prevalent – exception.
    I do think there are readers of all kinds. It’s finding the ones who would enjoy what we write that’s the hard part.

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  3. Brenda Anderson Avatar

    Boy, I’m with BK! I want to know the person before they get in trouble, otherwise, why do I care that they’re in trouble!
    And, Nicole, you’re right about the different levels of conflict per genre, and that it can be overdone. A lot has been made about the book GONE GIRL. I didn’t read the book but saw the movie, and to me it had about 2 too many plot twists. Yes, they were “I can’t believe it!” twists, but I was so ready for the movie to be done about a 1/2 hour earlier.

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  4. Nicole Avatar

    Bren, getting to know the person before they get in trouble: really good point. You’re right. Why should I care if so-and-so is in trouble if I can’t figure out why it matters. What makes that person so special?
    I guess my point is also that the everyday life of people doesn’t always contain horrific conflict. Some lives do and if that’s what you’re writing about, fine. Then you have a reason to spread conflict all over the pages, but aren’t the emotional conflicts that affect all of us important too even if they’re not catastrophic?

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