Gore in books? Or skip the details?
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Gore in books? Or skip the details?
- JPalomares
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The inclusion or glossing over of any detail in a book is fully dependent on the author's purpose for the book and the scene at hand:
- Is the author's purpose to make us feel something specific (fury, horror, satisfaction...)?
- Is a key plot element involved in the scene that necessitates our presence or absence?
- Does the scene positively or negatively affect the overall pacing or emotional arc of the novel?
- Which audience is the novel to be written for?
JPalomares
- Fifi_eve12
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But there's also the concern of becoming overly reliant upon the gore in your story. If the gore is the only thing that is making the scene action-packed, then I think the scene might need to be re-evaluated. I've found that a lot of the action scenes I enjoy have an equal measure of gore and tension in other areas as well.
- Inkroverts
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Some books like to portray the dark side of humanity and most of their content is gore, like American Psycho by Bret Easton Ellis.