A couple of months ago I was writing my Chances Are spinoff Another Chance and I kept running into a problem with the ending. I had sketched out one ending in my notes. Then I changed my notes. Then as I got up to that point in the actual writing I started an ending but didn't like it.
At that point I do what I often do: I took a drive to clear my head and think the problem through. Really it all boiled down to thinking, What exactly was the problem? In the end I realized the problem was that I knew pretty much what I should do but I kept not wanting to do it.
The story revolves around a con man who gets turned into a woman thanks to a drug he was trying to steal. He's then employed and trained by a covert government agency to steal a very special research project. Since the main character is a con artist I really didn't think I should have a big actiony ending with a shootout and explosions and such. The reason then I kept having problems with the ending is I kept trying to think of scenarios where he (she) wouldn't have to really fight the bad guys, usually involving some double-crosses. But at the end I wanted him (her) to be badly wounded to set up something for the future.
Eventually I just thought to myself, why the hell not do the big actiony ending? In a way it makes sense since it finally gives him (her) a chance to use a lot of the soldier-type skills the government instructed him (her) on. Plus it gave me a way to badly injure him (her) to set up something for the sequel. And who doesn't love a good gunfight and explosion?
So I just sat down and wrote it that way and it pretty much worked out. Whether readers will like it or not is a whole other thing. Anyway, the point is sometimes you just have to embrace something you're skeptical about; it might just turn out to work out better than you thought.
Endings are the hardest for me. I agree you don't always need a ton of action at the end. It just depends on the story and it sounds like you handled it well.
ReplyDeleteI hate endings. I've never thought of taking a drive though to clear my head. It sounds like an innovative way to write.
ReplyDeleteI agree that sometimes an obvious ending (or the ending you want to do) is the way to go. Action scenes work for James Bond, so why not Another Chance! I wish you a marvellous evening buddy.
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