Continuity and Consistency
Say you have a group of eight characters. Not all of them are major, but that isn’t
important at the moment. At the end of
chapter three they have to escape a city and the only way to safely escape is
to break into two groups and later meet up at a predetermined location. Group one consists of characters A, B, and C,
and they have to escape the city by a land route. They’ll continue to travel by land to the
predetermined location. Group two
consists of characters D, E, F, G, and H.
They have to escape through a waterway that flows through the city. They’ll follow the river to a village where a
few of this group’s members have allies that can get a ship for them. Chapter four follows group one as they escape
overland to draw their enemies from the trail of group two. Of course, group one loses any pursuers, but
through narration and dialogue, characters A, B, and C are all present and
accounted for. We get to chapter five
and lo and behold, character A, last seen leading group one through the
mountains at the end of chapter four, has magically appeared on the ship with
group two. This would be fine if there
had been a time lapse, and in many ways there was one. However, group two has not yet reached the
predetermined place and they’re talking about how long they should wait for
group one, since group two will almost certainly arrive first.
Umm…no.
At first, I thought character A was there in name only, a
typo because his name had been accidentally inserted in place of another
character’s. Unfortunately, as the scene
unfolded I realized that all of group two’s characters were also accounted for
and all were interacting with character A.
Not only that, but character A had a major role throughout the
chapter. So guess what happened?
Yep, a major rewrite of the entire chapter.
Not all continuity and consistency issues are that
major. One author referred to a specific
set of objects by certain names near the beginning of the manuscript. They weren’t mentioned again for roughly one
hundred pages, but the author called them something else at that point. He seemed happily surprised I caught this,
but readers have a tendency to see stuff like that. I admit I had to go back to the first mention
of these objects to verify that yes, the names were different, but continuity
and consistency are very important.
This is true for sequels as well. Make sure all your characters have the same
eye color and hair color as in the previous book, unless there’s a plausible
explanation for it to be different. If
you write a scene in the previous book from one character’s POV, and then write
that same scene in the next book from the POV of a different character, you
want to make sure the scenes echo each other.
If your character only says two or three word sentences a couple of
times in the second book, but in the first book he spoke a total of five
times—twice in one sentence consisting of three or four words, once in two
sentences, and once in a paragraph consisting of six to ten sentences—then
you’ve got a problem. If a character had
their hands tied behind their back in the scene in book one, and they’re tied
in front of them in book two, you’ve got a problem. The same can be said for the layout of
buildings, a school mascot, the name of a significant other’s ex, basically
anything that’s pretty much concrete in your story or in your series. If you say it’s May on page ten, you can’t
have your character tugging her jacket closer and kicking at the orange leaves
littering the ground when your reader gets to page twelve, not without a
significant time lapse.
So keep in mind you want to look out for the major continuity and consistency issues as well as the small ones that might only be mentioned twice, a hundred pages apart.
2 comments:
This reminds me. I should probably update my story bible...
Excellent example and highly pertinent point. From experience I have to say I'd rather have my beta reader catch me doing that, rather than my editor - ha!
Post a Comment