For twelve years, I wrote a syndicated weekly newspaper column. I only had six hundred words each week, so I learned to wrap the column neatly. The ending was always tied up with a clever image, like a bright bow on a tidy package.
When I went back to college for my MFA in fiction and began my first novel, this search for closure no longer suited my writing. Novels explore, they expand, they lead to deeper secrets and more adventurous events. When one of my teachers noticed this tendency to neaten up my chapter endings, she decided to broaden my understanding of pacing. How it differs in books--as opposed to short pieces