Scene Construction
How scenes work on the page: how to enter, how dialogue works, how to pace
beats within and across scenes, how to transition.
covers
sentence-level immersion;
covers what scenes do in the
story.
Scene Entry
Open in the middle of something happening. A character mid-task,
mid-conversation, or mid-thought gives the reader something to track
immediately. Let them orient through action and context.
When the setting itself is the story beat, such as a character seeing a
destroyed city for the first time or arriving somewhere that changes
everything, the description carries narrative weight and earns the opening.
Dialogue
Dialogue does at least two things at once: advance the plot AND reveal
character, or reveal character AND build tension, or build tension AND seed
information. Single-purpose dialogue ("As you know, the reactor is on the
third floor") feels flat because real conversation is never purely
transactional.
Subtext. Characters rarely say exactly what they mean. They deflect,
understate, change the subject, answer a different question than the one asked.
The gap between what's said and what's meant is where characterization lives.
Voice differentiation. Each character should sound distinct enough that you
could identify the speaker without dialogue tags. Vocabulary, sentence
structure, speech patterns, what they choose to talk about.
Action beats over dialogue tags. "Said" is invisible; use it freely. Use
action beats to show how something is said: "She set the cup down carefully.
'That's not what I meant.'"
Pacing
Alternate between high-tension and lower-tension beats within a scene.
Sustained intensity becomes numbing. The quiet moment after the crisis is what
gives the crisis weight.
Chapter-level: end on forward momentum: an unanswered question, a new
complication, an emotional shift. Give the reader a reason to continue.
Sentence-level rhythm (length, structure, speed control) lives in
.
Transitions
Move between scenes and time periods without losing the reader. A hard scene
break (whitespace or divider) resets time and place cleanly. A soft transition
within a scene compresses time: "The next three weeks passed in a blur of
training."
Match transition weight to what's being skipped. If nothing important happens
between scenes, a hard break is enough. If the skipped time matters
emotionally, a brief transitional passage acknowledges it.