Daniel David Wallace – Writing Great Chapters
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Build Tension and engagement. Create Intensely Real Characters. Flow from Scene to Scene.
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Daniel David Wallace – Writing Great Chapters
All the skills you need to write a great chapter: master narration, dramatic build up, paragraph flow, and character development.
Are You Ready to write more comfortably and more confidentlyβ¦Β Knowing that each chapter you draft is good?
Watch the full training session on keeping your reader happy and engaged.
Do you want to write great scenes and chapters thatΒ keep your reader turning pages?
Do you want theΒ confidenceΒ that you are delivering great dialogue, thrilling drama, and meaningful conflict?
Do you want toΒ stopΒ hearing your readers say things like, βWell, yeah, I liked the story, but I didnβt get why he bought the chicken. What was that part about?β
If so: I designed this course for you.

Iβm Daniel David Wallace, novelist, teacher, & PhD researcher
Several years ago, I arrived in the United States to begin a degree in creative writing. I had won an expensive fellowship and earned my place ahead of dozens of other writers.
I wasnβt sure if the program would be a good one, but I wasnβt too worried about that: I had prepared myself with serious years of solo study: reading plotting textbooks, copying out lines from classic poems, and keeping to a strict writing routine.
However, when I started sharing my work with colleagues and mentors, I discovered something distressing, something I would never have predicted:
No one understood what my stories were supposed to be about.
IΒ was bewildered. None of the craft books I had read had warned me about this. In fact, many of the authors I followed asserted that a real writer didnβt try to βdumb downβ or βspoon-feed the reader.β They talked as though being unusual and different was a good thingβ¦
But this didnβt seem to be the good result I had been promised.
Readers complained that they didnβt understand why these two characters disliked each other.
They couldnβt make sense of that scene in the woods with the butterfly.
They asked me crazy, insane questions, like why the character still loved this guy who was so mean to himβ¦ And when I politely explained that the character DID change in the final scene, that the shift was RIGHT THERE on the page, that the whole story had led up to this plot twist β well, these people just nodded, vaguely, and confessed they maybe werenβt great readers.
Something was really wrong.
And β even worse β it wasnβt clear what the problem was.
Colleagues said that I was clearly a good writer. Classmates could point out plot twists or descriptive passages they admired. I kept winning scholarships and minor awards.
Yet I never seemed able to write a story that made people say βwow.β
And this was the only thing I wanted.
Itβs actually very hard to write a scene that readers can effortlessly enjoy and understand
Slowly, gradually, I began to figure out what wasnβt working. I sat alone in coffeeshops, copying out great scenes from famous novels, circling repeating words, noting each time the narrator spoke. I took classes in narrative theory, reading essays on reading and story structure from serious Russians and melancholy Germans.
Now I could stand in front of one hundred tired people, reading them just a few scenes of a story, and keep their attention, hearing them laugh as the characterβs frustrations grew. Now I had a process for editing and fixing my own stories, checking them for moments when the clarity or energy weakened.
I began teaching other writers how to design their storyβs dramatic moments βcharacter-first.β
Thatβs what this course is going to equip you to do.
What is βCharacter-Firstβ Writing?
Hereβs why you should be writing your pages, scenes, and chapters βcharacter-firstβ:
Build Tension and engagement
By keeping the reader close to your main character, and giving that reader the right information so that they can appreciate what is going on, youβll be able to construct dramatic scenes that build to powerful, significant turning points.
Create Intensely Real Characters
Character-first writing will help you get past the surface questions of character creation: youβll be able to present characters that your reader will get to know on a deep, moving level. Additionally, while these fictional people will seem βrealisticβ to the reader, theyβll also be great tools for your plot, and despite their best efforts, such characters will end up getting into difficult situations again and again.
Flow from Scene to Scene
Many writers struggle to keep the story running smoothly from one location or dramatic encounter to the next. Character-first writing allows you to keep the reader vividly aware of the characterβs state of mind (their goals, fears, and expectations) as they turn page after page.
Hide Information in Plain Sight
Character-first writing makes you an expert at presenting the reader with clues that he doesnβt quite notice, or doesnβt quite pay attention to. No more info dumps. No more plot twists that no reader cares about. No more opaque characters that your reader finds unremarkable and bland.
Present A Compelling World
Character-first writing also treats the setting of your story as a character, and youβll introduce elements of your fictional world with the same variety and drama you would a regular character, allowing your reader to feel engrossed and at ease in the world of your story.

Daniel David Wallace
Creator ofΒ Plotting and Planning Your Novel
Your Teacher
Hi, Iβm Daniel. Iβm a writer, teacher, PhD researcher, and book editor. I create easy-to-implement techniques that help you master the craft of fiction.
Iβve given lectures on plot at the AWP conference and other writing festivals around the US, and my work has been read at the Iowa Writers Workshop. My fiction has won the Hodges prize, the Toni Brown scholarship, and Iβve published short stories and essays in many journals. In my regular life, I teach advanced writing skills at a great university.Β
Since I started teaching online, Iβve worked with hundreds of writers as a coach and teacher. Over two-thousand writers subscriber to my newsletter, βWriting Related.βΒ
Iβm currently working with a publisher on a novel set in Taiwan: it involves unhappy English teachers and a ghost.
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