Writing isn’t magic. You can’t just say “Presto! A rabbit!” and pull a rabbit out of a hat. (Well, you can, but nobody is likely to believe it.) No, if you’re going to pull a rabbit out of a hat, you have to start by sneaking the rabbit into the hat while nobody is supposed to be looking.

There are two ways of doing this: first, you know that at some point you’re going to need the rabbit in the hat, so you mention the rabbit in chapter one and the hat in chapter three and a few chapters later you comment about the rabbit’s interest in the hat and then you establish that the rabbit has a habit of crawling into small, dark places it’s not supposed to be. Then, when you need the rabbit to come out of the hat, nobody will think it’s an unbelievable coincidence.

The second way is to do all of that after the fact. That is, you discover while writing Chapter Twenty that you need a rabbit to come out of a hat right then, so that’s what you do. But it’s completely deus-ex-machina, out of the blue. It’s a really unbelievable coincidence. It doesn’t work. But you need it to happen that way; it’s right. So you go back to the first chapter or two and find a place where you can mention the hat, and a different place where you can mention the rabbit, and so on.

Oh, wait, there’s a third way: you get to the middle of Chapter Twenty and realize that you need something to happen right then, but you’re not sure what. So you look back over the first few chapters and realize that you mentioned a rabbit that would be just perfect for distracting the villain at the critical moment. And you check over the next few chapters and don’t find another mention of the rabbit, but there’s a mention of a hat. Then you do a search on “rabbit” and discover that the rabbit has been nibbling on the hat in Chapter Ten…it’s all there already, all you have to do is have the rabbit pop out of the hat.

Basically, what I’m talking about here is setup. Sometimes, it happens by accident, as in that “third way,” but you can’t depend on things going that well. More usually, either you know the event is coming and you build in the setup as you write, or you go back and fill in the bits that make the event believable after you write the scene where it happens.

Either way, what you’re looking for are ways of establishing various elements of the Big Surprise so that when it happens, it’s plausible. It’s not quite the same as foreshadowing, though it is related. For instance, in The Lord of the Rings, Isildur’s last-minute refusal to destroy the ring both foreshadows Frodo’s refusal and is part of the setup (in that it is one of many reiterations of the fact that it is practically impossible for anyone who has the ring to give it up voluntarily, let alone see it destroyed). Bilbo’s reluctance to give up the ring, on the other hand, is more setup than foreshadowing (I think); Gollum’s obsession with it is definitely setup.

The terminology is not actually particularly important for a writer; the important thing is that there is a difference between warning the reader that something big is about to happen and getting the reader to believe in whatever happens. The classic “dark clouds hovered ominously on the horizon” is usually foreshadowing trouble to come; it becomes setup when the characters are caught in a downpour a few hours later.

The one thing I have never seen work is trying to do all of the setup after the fact. Which is not to say it couldn’t ever work that way, but nearly all the writers I’ve seen try it have been beginners who either can’t figure out how to set up their Big Surprise, or can’t bring themselves to go back and put in the setup after they’ve written the scene.

In the first case, the problem is often that the author has chosen a single-viewpoint story, and the most obvious place for the setup is in a scene or scenes for which the viewpoint character wouldn’t be present. The solution is to look for non-obvious places and more indirect setup; instead of mentioning the rabbit, the hat, etc., the writer might have a character complain about rabbits hiding in ridiculous places, and later someone gets a letter about his niece receiving a rabbit for her birthday. A more complete explanation may still be needed after the fact, but it will be filling in the blank spots, not trying to create a whole canvas from scratch – it ends up being like the detective’s explanation in a mystery novel, stringing together the clues that were right there all along.

In the second case, the author is often terrified of giving too much away too soon. They are so focused on the necessity of the Big Surprise being a surprise that they are afraid to tell the reader anything, for fear of tipping them off. This writer needs to get over it and accept that for some exceptionally perceptive readers, the story is going to be a thriller, not a mystery – that is, the point is not finding out whodunnit, but watching the protagonist beat the antagonist to the finish line – and then go back and put in some setup. In extreme cases, the writer needs a reliable first-reader who can tell them that they need more setup and no, it won’t spoil the ending (or, very occasionally, that they really have done too much and need to obscure some of it if they want the surprise to be surprising).

Note that none of this applies to the author who is deliberately putting most of the plot offstage (John M. Ford comes instantly to mind). That’s a completely different style of writing, and whether one likes it or not is a matter of taste, not flaws in the construction.

7 Comments
  1. I’m still new at this (working on book 4) but I’m finding that a high-level outline where I know what big things will happen but am hazy on the details gives me enough freedom to crank out Act 1 fairly organically. So far I’ve been lucky — the organic widgets I need to trigger later events seem to just fall into place suggestively (your third way) to give me touches I can use by the time I need them with minimal backfill.

    Current example: I know my hero will return to his stable home at the end — how will that be indicated emotionally to provide satisfaction at an almost subliminal level?

    Apropos of nothing in particular, I just described his inherited garden in Act 1 that doesn’t have any roses and explained why (a bit of unimportant history that gave a bit of insight into 3 characters). The wife (an artist) remarks that she regrets not having roses around.

    Then I realized… the roses will have nothing to do with the actual plot, but at the end there will be roses in that garden and his wife pleased, and I may even have a running joke throughout the middle when the hero is away from home of sending rose plants randomly to his wife as a bit of side action, like an emotional punctuation about missing his home.

    I’m not advanced enough as a writer to do that sort of thing deliberately, but I sure do love it when it just seems to pop out of my head anyway.

  2. You got through that entire post without mentioning Chekhov’s gun.

    “Mr. Chekhov, please pick up a white, fur-covered courtesy phone.”

  3. I’ve had to do so many revisions on my latest WIP because of this very problem. Sigh.

  4. Oh man. I’m used to writing short stories/novellas where i can keep track of all my rabbits, so when I need one, I’ve got it, and it turns out connected and organic. But novels are so much harder, because I write them and there are TOO MANY RABBITS. And then I have to try and get the right rabbits into the right hats, and then I have to make sure the rabbits aren’t just sitting out on the lawn, so there’s some element of surprise, but that the hat is sitting on the lawn, so people will care. And then I realize something’s a hat that should be a rabbit, and something else is a rabbit that should be a hat.
    Gah. Damn rabbits.

  5. Cara, so write “Fibonucci’s Rabbits” and get rid of your excess rabbits.

    If you use the idea, you can dedicate the story to me: “This story is dedicated to Gene Wirchenko who thought up the idea but was not competent to write it. Neener, neener!” or something.

  6. Perfectly timing.

    I just hacked an entire setting out of my conclusion — I concluded it didn’t work — and started to sketch in another location.

    Whereupon my muse cheerfully explained that it was the linchpin explaining a whole lot of things to the story.

    Whereupon my inner story architect pointed out that we would need to restructure a number of scenes to accomodate it. Oddly enough, what it mostly consists of is the heroine (perhaps with the help of the love interest) asking the questions that the new setting will explain, so that the question has been raised.

    sigh

  7. Cheers to the third way, which is how most of my planning gets done. I assume my back-brain is figuring out at least some of this in advance, and just not telling me about it until I need to know, but for all I know it might not be. Not only is the rapid exploitation of belatedly-recognized opportunity indistinguishable from deep-laid planning from the outside, sometimes you can’t tell the difference from the inside, either.

    I’ve learned to be very indulgent when my back-brain wants to throw a random rabbit into the landscape. Sometimes it just ends up being local color, but quite often it turns out to be there for a reason.