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https://www.facebook.com/Roland-Yeomans-AuthorKnight-Errant-1103005016429637/To every beginning there is an ending.
But not always ...
In my worldview, the soul has a beginning but no true ending.
Perhaps it has a final destination, yet no ending but eternity.
What did Woody Allen say?
Eternity is awfully long ... especially towards the end.
But for novels there has to be an ending. But where?
Remember the multiple "endings" to the movie, RETURN OF THE KING.
I was with my date who kept starting to get up scene after scene. Peter Jackson just didn't seem to want to end his epic tale.
Of course those of us who had read the book knew what the true ending would be.
But most in the audience hadn't read the book.
And like my date, they were frustrated and a bit miffed at Peter for misleading them scene after scene.
Not unlike an old car that just wouldn't stop after the key is turned off.
Finally, the epic ends with the closing of the door to Sam's home.
But it was too late. Most felt dissatisfied at the false endings.
Take John Ford's classic Western, THE SEARCHERS.
It, too, ends with the closing of a home's door -- but the perspective is switched.
The audience sees from the inside out to the figure of John Wayne beyond.
A cover story in New York magazine called it the most influential movie ending in American history.
The opening and closing shots, of Ethan arriving and leaving,
framed in a doorway. The poignancy with which he stands alone at the door,
one hand on the opposite elbow (his arm having been wounded by an arrow earlier in the film),
forgotten for a moment after delivering Debbie home.
These shots are among the treasures of the cinema.
Ethan (John Wayne) cannot enter the home which represents civilization, home, and forgiveness.
He is too wounded (hence the gesture of holding his formerly wounded arm.)
Ethan's story is the tragedy of the loner:
we see Ethan at the end of the film, as we saw him at its beginning:
alone, lonely, haunted by the past, and deeply wounded.
John Ford had this ending in mind when he filmed the beginning.
I believe to have a truly focused novel, we as authors should have the ending in view from the very start of our story.
Doing so provides that emotional impact of the closing lines which touches the reader's head as well as heart.
Of course, there are different ways to do that:
Snipping all the loose ends neatly.
But not always ...
In my worldview, the soul has a beginning but no true ending.
Perhaps it has a final destination, yet no ending but eternity.
What did Woody Allen say?
Eternity is awfully long ... especially towards the end.
But for novels there has to be an ending. But where?
Remember the multiple "endings" to the movie, RETURN OF THE KING.
I was with my date who kept starting to get up scene after scene. Peter Jackson just didn't seem to want to end his epic tale.
Of course those of us who had read the book knew what the true ending would be.
But most in the audience hadn't read the book.
And like my date, they were frustrated and a bit miffed at Peter for misleading them scene after scene.
Not unlike an old car that just wouldn't stop after the key is turned off.
Finally, the epic ends with the closing of the door to Sam's home.
But it was too late. Most felt dissatisfied at the false endings.
Take John Ford's classic Western, THE SEARCHERS.
It, too, ends with the closing of a home's door -- but the perspective is switched.
The audience sees from the inside out to the figure of John Wayne beyond.
A cover story in New York magazine called it the most influential movie ending in American history.
The opening and closing shots, of Ethan arriving and leaving,
framed in a doorway. The poignancy with which he stands alone at the door,
one hand on the opposite elbow (his arm having been wounded by an arrow earlier in the film),
forgotten for a moment after delivering Debbie home.
These shots are among the treasures of the cinema.
Ethan (John Wayne) cannot enter the home which represents civilization, home, and forgiveness.
He is too wounded (hence the gesture of holding his formerly wounded arm.)
Ethan's story is the tragedy of the loner:
we see Ethan at the end of the film, as we saw him at its beginning:
alone, lonely, haunted by the past, and deeply wounded.
John Ford had this ending in mind when he filmed the beginning.
I believe to have a truly focused novel, we as authors should have the ending in view from the very start of our story.
Doing so provides that emotional impact of the closing lines which touches the reader's head as well as heart.
Of course, there are different ways to do that:
Snipping all the loose ends neatly.
Bracketing the novel with book-end type scenes as Ford did with THE SEARCHERS.
Or ending with a cliff-hanger,
drawing the reader into an anxious anticipation for the next chapter in an on-going story --
as life is on-going.
How do you decide when to end your novel and why?
***
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