Does your novel have Kindle Syndrome?
Would you be able to recognize it if it did?
For an intro into where these tips are coming from, please see my post: A Full Manuscript Rejection, or a Gold Mine? You can also click “Rant Worthy Topics” in my right navigation bar. Choose “Gold Mine Manuscript” to see all the lessons to date.
2015 NOTE: Since I wrote this a few years ago, I have now purchased and fallen in love with my e-reader. I have to say that I am note sure that I would find white space a problem … but since it was pointed out, it is at least worth thinking about. But what I DO AGREE WITH is mixing EVERYTHING up with some action. Let’s keep those stories moving!
I read right over this comment at least five times. I do not own a kindle, so I didn’t understand what the publisher was saying. This past weekend, I messed around with my sister’s Kindle. Now this makes sense. Let me explain…
The publisher said: “This is a very long section that takes up two kindle pages of material. Break it up with action and reaction.”
I believe I’ve already blogged about the overall problem of info dumps that go on too long, but this time when I read this comment, the “Kindle” word jumped out at me.
It would be foolhardy for anyone to think that their novels are going to be read 100 % in printed form. In this new era, it’s just not feasible. As we all know, technology has finally taken over the publishing world.
When I beta-read novels, I sometimes blow up the pages and just look at them. If it looks like a text-book, I know there is a problem. People want white-space when they read recreationally. A dense page seems like too much work, right?
Now think about the Kindle (or choose your e-reader)… What does it look like? Do you see a full page like in a book? Unless you are reading on something large, the screen is much smaller than an actual page. A Kindle reader may press the forward button 2-3 times to get through a printed page of material. I checked the word count on the section that they were talking about, and it was 230 words. That’s about one page in a standard book. If you change the type font and make it larger, there would be even more clicks to your page.
Do you really want your reader to click forward 3-4 times and have them still skimming reading the same description?
This is what I am getting at… The importance of White Space
White space is when you can “see the paper” behind your words. White space can be achieved by new paragraphs, but it is done most effectively with dialog sequences. Open up a few novels. You should be able to see what I mean. Your novel should not look like a text-book. If there is dialog, it will look more “interactive”
I know as a reader I like white space. It makes me feel accomplished. True, on a kindle you cannot feel yourself getting to the end of a novel. You might not even know you are at the end until you are there, since there are no page numbers (at least on the one my sister showed me)—so feeling accomplished while reading one must be hard… But because of this, your reader will be effected EVEN MORE by lack of white space, because it will be so much more dramatic on a kindle screen rather than on paper.
I know a lot of you might not care… but I thought this would be worth mentioning. We are living in a new world. We have to consider what your novel will look like on the new media. One or two long dense paragraphs might be fine once in a while, but make sure your scenes are broken up not only for pacing, but to get some of that “all so important” white space.
Amendment: Since writing this post, I was given a Kindle Fire by my wonderful husband, and I am now 75% through my first novel. Now that I am in this “electronic world,” I have to admit that everything I said up above really does apply. Some of the description in the novel I am reading go on for 5 or more kindle pages of dense text. The prose is beautiful, and well written, but to be honest I always start skimming somewhere in the middle of the second kindle page, which is far sooner than I would have on paper.
Also, on the Kindle Fire there are no page numbers, but it does tell you “percentage read” so you do see yourself getting to the end.
For me though, it makes the long descriptions even more monotonous because I like to feel accomplished. I try to read a certain percentage each night, and I don’t know how many pages I have to read to achieve another “percent” read.
Yeah, I’m a nut. But I am sure I am not alone! Have mercy on a nutty reader. Avoid Kindle Syndrome.