Managing the Middle

Tamara Dean  |  July 29, 2024  | 

tamara deanTamara Dean is the author of Shelter and Storm, an essay collection forthcoming from the University of Minnesota Press in 2025. Her work has appeared in The American Scholar, Creative Nonfiction, The Georgia Review, the GuardianOne Story, Orion, The Southern Review, and other publications. Subscribe to her monthly email newsletter to get more writing tips and first dibs in her workshops.

 

In the middle of this year, I’m thinking about the middle of stories. Whereas beginnings, with their destabilization of normal circumstances, and endings, with their reverberating shifts and revelations, feel naturally dramatic, middles can feel like a slog. As writers, that’s the last thing we want. A slog to write is a slog to read—or to watch.

I just gave up on a popular TV series that has this problem. Several recent episodes feature the same arguments between the same characters, the same tensions over money and love. Early on, those tensions showed promise. But now, with no growing threats of dooming the characters’ chances at happiness, the tensions are tedious.

Whenever protagonists (such as you, in a personal essay or memoir) don’t face new or increasingly serious difficulties or threats, a narrative slows.

I recently read two books with terrific middles. One is Eve J. Chung’s novel, Daughters of Shandong, which follows a girl in northern China whose family is displaced when Communists take over the country. Another is the nonfiction account of Captain Cook’s final expedition, The Wide Wide Sea, by Hampton Sides. In both narratives, just when you think things couldn’t be worse for the protagonist, they get worse.

But if you’re facing a monotonous middle, how can you make it magical?

  • Rework your opening. “All second-act problems are really first-act problems”—that’s a saying from script writing. It’s not always true, but it’s worth considering. Ask yourself, in your story’s beginning, do you care deeply about your protagonist and what happens to them? Do they have a goal that’s huge, meaningful, and hard to reach? Do they have an important reason for wanting that goal? Are significant obstacles preventing them from reaching it? When you can answer “yes” to these questions, you’ll have a beginning that sets you up for a better middle.
  • Escalate. Escalation means it becomes harder and harder for your protagonist to reach their goal. The stakes of not reaching that goal rise. Escalations can involve the tangible, such as a propeller breaking on the boat that you bought for your charter fishing business that you quit your good-paying job to start just as you’re face mounting bills. Or they can be psychological, such as a long-lost cousin calling to ask a favor, after reminding you of how she saved your life when you were in trouble and threatening to expose your long-kept secret. Escalate in the direction of your protagonist’s worst fears and dearest longings. Aim for continual escalation until your story’s climax. Don’t hesitate to complicate the situation. Include reversals and contradictions. Show how the protagonist is fooling themselves. Leave gaps or reveal hidden truths. Imagine how more bravery and honesty could point to escalation.
  • Adjust your timing. Are you beginning the story too early, with preliminaries that don’t illuminate or put pressure on the protagonist’s dilemma and desires? If so, try beginning in medias res (in the midst of things), at the moment when everything changed and set the story into motion. Or is it possible that your middle is a chunk of backstory that could be broken up and interspersed with the main action? Perhaps your middle could be trimmed to a fraction of its size so readers reach the third act’s action sooner. While revising, remain open to adjusting the content in any way that makes your story better.

If you can’t tell whether your middle is monotonous, try setting your story aside and returning to it after many months with a fresh perspective. Also, ask the opinion of a smart, candid writer or editor friend.

Take heart, if you’re struggling with the middle. You’re not alone, and you’re on the right path. The only way to write a manuscript that grips readers from its beginning through its middle to its end is to keep writing.

Tamara Dean

4 Comments

  1. Martha E. Shenton on July 30, 2024 at 7:45 am

    Thank you. I have not considered that perhaps the beginning did not set up the challenges that followed as well as the writer thought. I am working on the beginning now and I am putting too much information there instead of allowing the backstory to unfold as part of the middle and even the ending of the story. Tamara Dean’s insight is most helpful.

    • Tamara Dean on July 31, 2024 at 7:20 am

      I’m so glad it’s helpful, Martha! Parceling out backstory is truly an art. Sometimes I think of writing narratives as a matter of raising questions and answering them with just the right timing and only the necessary information.

  2. MARY EASTHAM on August 6, 2024 at 10:33 am

    This came just at the right time for me. I’m working on my best story (I’ve written & pubbed many) so there’s the pressure of even saying ‘it’s my best!’ Having read your article, I’m gonna storyboard it so I can break down all the elements (I’m one of those writers that puts so much in my stories), to see how each piece can be revealed in the right way and at the right time. I also put T.E.N.S.I.O.N at the top of the page w/my new (I love them!) Sharpie Magic Markers. Onward & upward fellow writers. We can do this!

    • Tamara Dean on August 7, 2024 at 6:30 am

      Great to hear, Mary! I’m a fan of those stories, like your in-progress piece, that contain a lot of elements. I’m rooting for you as you revise to make everything cohere and as you send this story out for publication.

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