by Stephanie Morrill
Stephanie writes young adult contemporary novels and is the creator of GoTeenWriters.com. Her novels include The Reinvention of Skylar Hoyt series (Revell) and the Ellie Sweet books (Birch House Press). You can connect with her on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, and check out samples of her work on her author website including the free novella, Throwing Stones.
(This post is part of the Writing A Novel From Beginning to End series. You can find other posts from this series on the Looking For Something Specific? tab.)
This will be my last post until late November since by the end of this week, I’ll have a baby. (Yikes!) We’ll hit the pause button on talking about first drafts until I return on November 23rd. Between now and then, Jill and I have lots of great guests lined up, so I don’t think you’ll even notice I’m gone.
If there’s one scene you need to set up a satisfying conclusion for your story, it’s your main character’s “all is lost” moment. This is a scene that goes by many names—the black moment, a whiff of death, the dark night of the soul, and probably many others—but whatever you call it, the feeling you want to evoke is that the character has lost what mattered most and they can’t carry on like they were.
Let’s look briefly at a few examples of All Is Lost moments. I’ve purposely picked older or extremely popular stories because sharing the black moment often gives away a lot about the story, and I don’t want to ruin anything.
In Frozen, the All Is Lost moment is when Anna discovers Hans’s true motives and that what she thought was love really wasn’t. He leaves her in the room to freeze to death.
In Pride and Prejudice, Elizabeth comes to realize how good of a man Mr. Darcy actually is and what a mistake it was to turn down his proposal. This realization comes right as her family’s name has been destroyed and there’s now no hope that a man like him would stoop to marry her.
In the romantic comedy You’ve Got Mail, Kathleen Kelly loses the bookstore she inherited from her mother, which is what she fought the entire movie to save.
In Harry Potter and The Prisoner of Azkaban, it’s when Buckbeak is executed.
Even Charlie Brown Christmas has a black moment—when Charlie’s Christmas tree fails and everyone laughs at him.
Why is this scene so vital? If the reader doesn’t feel like things have truly gone bad, they won’t be as excited when things turn out good for the character at the end. Making things bad for your character needs to be in the context with the genre and target audience. We don’t need to feel like Charlie Brown’s life is in jeopardy, right? It’s sufficient that he fails yet again and is publicly humiliated.
In order for the All Is Lost moment to work well, there are a few elements it needs to have:
But the death of something else—a dream, a belief, a relationship, a purpose—can be just as effective. Again, it’s dependent on the mood of your story.
Maybe it’s a loss of physical strength. Like in Frozen, where Anna is locked in a room, freezing to death.
Or in the case of You’ve Got Mail, Kathleen has spent the entire movie fighting for her bookstore only to lose it. She has nothing to fight for and no clear direction moving forward.
That makes for a very formidable opponent as we head into the final chapters of the story!