Navigation       Home                            Contact                           Link

AMAZONTAGHERE6

 

ARTICLE PREVIEW

How To Be A Customer For Your Own Articles
Internet marketers are constantly concerned with this question - how to get more visitors, subscribers, customers. Like many internet business owners I have tried many tricks of the trade to attract...read more

How to Hire an Asphalt Driveway Paving Contractor
Asphalt paved driveways are extremely popular and the most cost effective to install over most other driveway options. Hiring the right asphalt paving contractor however can sometimes be a...read more

How to Build Mini Storage
The mini storage business can be very profitable and rewarding. If you choose to start a mini storage business, you can get a high return on your investment. Most people do not know how to build...read more

HOME >> How to Write a Great Ghost Story

 

YOURIMAGEHERE3

How to Write a Great Ghost Story
By Mary Casey

 

 

Why do some ghost stories keep you up all night, staring at your closet and checking under your bed?

Why do other ghost stories produce giggles or complete boredom?

Here are thoughts on what makes the PERFECT ghost story.

1) Atmosphere

There is no ghost story worth one goose bump without atmosphere. Readers need to be gradually removed from their cozy surroundings and brought into the spooky world of the ghost. The author should involve all the senses including sight, smell, sound and touch. A skilled author can evoke other 'senses' such as premonition or 'women's intuition'. The ghost story requires the reader to be shown the atmosphere, not told. Out of all the elements that create a great ghost story, the atmosphere is probably the most important.

Where should a ghost story take place? A ghost story doesn't have to happen in a decrepit mansion or a graveyard. Expert ghost authors such as Ambrose Bierce or Peter Straub use various settings for their ghost stories including cabins in the woods, or a coffee shop. It is how the authors use the settings to produce the willies that matter.

2) Emotion

You can't have a scary read without the characters feeling escalating levels of fright. The reader will identify with the gradual feeling of dread and begin to feel the same. The best stories creep up on the reader with gentle nudges into fear. Today's reader will either laugh or fall asleep if presented with a bludgeoning approach to a ghost story. The reader requires a modicum of belief to be truly scared.

3)Plot

A ghost story needs a plot. The reader craves a reason to continue to peruse the pages. An eye-catching beginning, a breathless middle, and a satisfying ending are paramount.

Be original. Nothing will loose the interest of a reader more than a rehashed plot. If I read another story about a group of teenagers abandoned in an old house in the rain, I will wear a dress. And that will be sure to make the neighbors scream!

Create a mystery. All great ghost stories have a mystery behind them. The reader becomes involved with the characters in solving the story behind the haunting. Don't present a ghost without a background. Remember the ghost is the primary character of the ghost story, and needs to be a living part of the story. Not exactly living, however...

So get your quills out, draw the curtains, light your candle and begin to write your ghost story...I dare you!









About the author:

Mary Casey is an author on a site for Creative Writing

Return to HOME to read more articles
 

RSSTAGHERE4

 

COPYRIGHT © 2009-2015 HOW TO - ALL RIGHT RESERVED

 

CLICKBANKBUDDYTAGHERE5