So. Here we go again.

After another year of dogged determination or sheer insanity, I’m ready to draft out the final chapter of my current wip. Except I don’t know how my book ends.

I mean, I have a vague idea of how it should end (hopefully leaving the reader slavering for more), but I’m waffling between an upbeat ending or something more artistic (e.g. sad). I confess I’m so sick of my wip right now that I want to slap some perfunctory ride-into-the-sunset down and get onto the hard work of revisions. But I know it’s either come up with the ending now, or come up with it after wasting more months navel-gazing. I choose getting on with it now.

So I went back to my trusty Vogler and Frey, and refreshed myself on the guts of good endings.

According to the masters, a good ending should:

  • Tie up unanswered questions
  • Show how your protagonists have changed
  • Reward or punish your protagonists
  • Give the reader an emotional catharsis (note: this doesn’t necessarily mean a happy ending, it means eliciting an emotional response–like tears or surprise or discomfort).

A bad ending:

  • Has too many endings because the writer couldn’t choose one
  • Leaves subplots unresolved
  • Ends too abruptly
  • Doesn’t support the theme of the story

I guess I should confess now that I’m a fan of the corny ending. Scrooge running out into the street on Christmas Day, thrilled to be alive. Jane Eyre’s, “Reader, I married him.” Danny Zuko’s hotrod soaring into the heavens in the last frame of the movie Grease.

Indeedy, I love me a cornpone ending. Doesn’t mean I want my book to have one, though.

I’m going to take a few days to study my favorite endings to see if I can deconstruct what it is about them that makes them sing to me. Hopefully I’ll find my ‘right’ ending soon.

What makes a good ending for you? Schmaltz? A breathless surprise? Good triumphing over evil? Or maybe the opposite. I’m interested in hearing your opinions. It could help me figure out my own ending.

Kathleen Bolton is co-founder of Writer Unboxed. She has written two novels under the pseudonym Cassidy Calloway: Confessions of a First Daughter, and Secrets of a First Daughter--both books in a YA series about the misadventures of the U.S. President's teen-aged daughter, published by HarperCollins.
Kathleen Bolton
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