Thriller Chat with Chris Allen discussion
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What makes a good thriller?
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As somebody once said to me (describing a book I'd let them borrow) "It was unputdownable!" :D
Steve wrote: "An excellent definition, Larry :) I never used to be a thriller reader, and if it had been left up to some writers, I never would have become one! Happily, a couple of things changed that. My so..."
Hi Steve,
So pleased you started enjoying this new genre thanks to you-know-who. I am about to start a Lee Childs book but not sure which one. Have you read any of his?
Chris has just posted about what makes a cracking thriller on That Book You Like and talks about a plot that keeps you guessing, action that compels you to keep reading and characters you care about. If you are interested here's the link: http://buff.ly/13Bb6eR
Best, Sar
Hi Steve,
So pleased you started enjoying this new genre thanks to you-know-who. I am about to start a Lee Childs book but not sure which one. Have you read any of his?
Chris has just posted about what makes a cracking thriller on That Book You Like and talks about a plot that keeps you guessing, action that compels you to keep reading and characters you care about. If you are interested here's the link: http://buff.ly/13Bb6eR
Best, Sar
Larry wrote: "Hey, nice to be here.
I am a big fan of the great masters - Ludlum and Clancy - they have shaped my direction in what i call a great thriller - for me it's a balance between a good story line, acti..."
That is a good way of expressing it Larry and I agree with you!
I am a big fan of the great masters - Ludlum and Clancy - they have shaped my direction in what i call a great thriller - for me it's a balance between a good story line, acti..."
That is a good way of expressing it Larry and I agree with you!

Thanks, Sarah :) I'm afraid I can't help Lee Childs - I don't even know the name :)
I read Chris' post there. Very useful and excellent advice ;)

Jim wrote: "What's always worked for me is the combination of a protagonist with a flaw struggling against an antagonist with a point."
I love it!
I love it!
Jim wrote: "What's always worked for me is the combination of a protagonist with a flaw struggling against an antagonist with a point."
Mmm me too! Great point Jim!!
Mmm me too! Great point Jim!!
Spot on Jim! Would only add 'expectation coupled with anxiety' adds to your equation for me - you know what you want from a thriller, but you also bed that feeling in your gut as you're reading!
I am a big fan of the great masters - Ludlum and Clancy - they have shaped my direction in what i call a great thriller - for me it's a balance between a good story line, action and education - a good thriller must reveal enough details based on great research to come across as believable. When readers can envision the pages they read than you caught their imagination and a bond with the story is formed.
However, to seal the pact an emotional reaction is necessary. Get your readers emotionally involved - any strong emotional reaction counts - and they become hooked.
I hope I managed to follow this formula.