Pacing is the invisible architecture of fiction. Readers rarely notice it when it’s working—they’re too absorbed in the story. But when pacing fails, everything falls apart. The thriller feels sluggish. The literary novel feels rushed. The reader puts down the book.
After editing hundreds of manuscripts, I’ve found that pacing problems fall into predictable patterns. The good news: they’re fixable. Here’s how pacing actually works, with concrete techniques you can apply to your current project.
What Pacing Really Means

Pacing is how quickly or slowly your story unfolds—the rhythm of your narrative. But it’s not just about speed. It’s about appropriate speed. A thriller that never slows down exhausts readers. A literary novel that never accelerates bores them.
The goal is controlled variation. Fast when tension should build. Slow when emotions need space to land. The contrast creates momentum.
Tools That Speed Up Pacing
1. Short Sentences
Nothing accelerates prose like stripped-down syntax. Compare:
Slow: “She could hear the footsteps approaching from somewhere behind her in the darkness, and she realized with a growing sense of dread that she would need to find somewhere to hide before whoever it was caught up with her.”
Fast: “Footsteps behind her. Getting closer. She ran.”
Short sentences force readers’ eyes across the page faster. They create white space. They mimic the staccato rhythm of heightened states—fear, excitement, urgency.
Use them in action sequences, moments of revelation, and anywhere you want readers to feel breathless.
2. Rapid-Fire Dialogue
Dialogue inherently moves faster than prose because it’s mostly white space. But you can accelerate it further by:
- Cutting dialogue tags (“he said,” “she replied”)
- Eliminating beats between lines
- Shortening the lines themselves
“Where is it?”
“I don’t know.”
“You’re lying.”
“I’m not—”
“Then where?”
The reader’s eye flies down the page. Tension escalates with each exchange. No room to breathe—which is exactly the effect you want.
3. Scene Cuts
Also called jump cuts. Instead of walking the reader through every transition, cut directly to the next moment of significance:
She grabbed the car keys and ran for the door.
***
The hospital parking lot was nearly empty at 3 a.m.
We don’t need to see her drive. We don’t need the highway description. Cut to what matters.
4. Cliffhangers
End chapters or scenes mid-action. Leave questions unanswered. Interrupt crucial moments.
Gillian Flynn does this masterfully in Gone Girl—nearly every chapter ends on an unresolved note that compels the reader to continue. The technique is almost manipulative, but it works.
The key is placing your chapter breaks not after resolution, but before it. End on the question, not the answer.
5. Time Compression
Summarize periods where nothing important happens:
“Three weeks passed. The detectives made no progress. The leads went cold. And then, on a Tuesday morning, a fisherman found the boat.”
This covers 21 days in four sentences, skipping straight to the significant event. Time compression keeps the narrative focused on what matters.
Tools That Slow Down Pacing
Slowing down isn’t about boring readers—it’s about giving emotional moments room to resonate. Not everything should hit at full speed.
1. Description and Sensory Detail
Description naturally decelerates prose. Use it strategically after high-action sequences to let readers (and characters) catch their breath:
“He found a bench by the river and sat. The water moved slowly here, the current barely visible beneath the surface. Somewhere upstream, a fish jumped. The sound reached him a half-second later, already fading. He sat until the shadows lengthened and the joggers disappeared and the city noise faded to a distant hum.”
This kind of passage works after a revelation, loss, or climactic scene. It gives the reader space to process.
2. Introspection and Internal Monologue
Entering a character’s thoughts slows pacing but deepens engagement:
“She tried to remember the last time she’d felt certain about anything. Not confident—confidence could be performed. Certainty was different. Certainty was bone-deep, unshakeable. She couldn’t remember ever having it.”
This is best deployed between plot events, when the character needs to make sense of what happened or prepare for what’s coming.
3. Longer Sentences and Complex Syntax
The inverse of short sentences. When you want readers to linger:
“The house had belonged to her grandmother, and to her grandmother’s mother before that, and perhaps to others before them—women whose names she’d never learned, whose photographs she’d never seen, who existed only as absence, as negative space in a family history that had more gaps than substance.”
Long sentences slow the eye, encourage rereading, and create a meditative quality. Use them sparingly in literary fiction; avoid them in thrillers except in deliberate contrast moments.
4. Scene Extension
The opposite of time compression. Extend important moments in real-time or even slower:
“She reached for the envelope. Her fingers touched the paper. She noticed how thin it was—too thin for anything but a single sheet. She knew, before she opened it, what that meant. Still, she slid her finger under the flap, lifted it, withdrew the letter, and read the three sentences that would change everything.”
Real-time narration builds anticipation. The reader experiences the moment at the same pace as the character.
The Rollercoaster Principle
Clare Mackintosh put it best: “Rollercoasters are only exciting because of the transition from high to low. What scares you is the swoop down to the bottom.”
Constant fast pacing numbs readers. Constant slow pacing bores them. The emotional impact comes from contrast—the shift between fast and slow, tense and relaxed, action and reflection.
Map your manuscript’s pacing. Identify where you accelerate and decelerate. If you find long stretches of uniform pace, something’s wrong.
Genre-Specific Pacing
Thrillers and Suspense
Generally faster overall, with short chapters, frequent cliffhangers, and compressed timelines. But the best thrillers still include deceleration—they just do it briefly. Lee Child’s Jack Reacher novels are relentlessly paced, but even Reacher stops to eat, sleep, and think between set pieces.
Literary Fiction
Generally slower, with more room for introspection and description. But literary fiction that never accelerates risks losing readers. Cormac McCarthy’s The Road is deliberately paced, but it still contains moments of urgent action that propel the narrative forward.
Romance
Pacing often follows the emotional arc more than plot events. Scenes between the protagonists may unfold in near real-time, while separations compress. The emotional rhythm—tension, release, tension—drives the pace.
Mystery
Investigations require slower, detail-oriented sections balanced against faster revelations and confrontations. The pacing often accelerates as the mystery narrows toward resolution.
A Practical Exercise
Take a scene you’ve written and revise it twice:
Version A: Maximum acceleration. Cut every unnecessary word. Break long sentences into short ones. Eliminate dialogue tags. Add a cliffhanger ending.
Version B: Maximum deceleration. Extend description. Add internal monologue. Lengthen sentences. Let the scene breathe.
Neither version will be perfect. But comparing them reveals how pacing tools affect reader experience—and helps you find the right speed for the scene’s purpose.
Pacing Problems and Fixes
Problem: The Saggy Middle
Symptom: The story feels like it stalls after the first third.
Fix: Add a midpoint revelation or reversal that accelerates the second half. Introduce a ticking clock. Cut scenes that exist only for character “development” without plot advancement.
Problem: Exhausting Action
Symptom: Readers feel fatigued despite exciting events.
Fix: Add recovery scenes between action sequences. Let characters (and readers) process what happened before throwing them into the next crisis.
Problem: Rushed Ending
Symptom: The climax feels unsatisfying despite containing all necessary elements.
Fix: Slow down the climax. Extend key moments. Let revelations land before moving on. Often writers rush endings because they’re tired of the manuscript—resist this.
Problem: Meandering Opening
Symptom: The story takes too long to engage readers.
Fix: Start later. Cut the first chapter and see if the story works without it. (It usually does.) Begin with action or tension, not setup.
The Reader’s Experience
Ultimately, pacing is about reader experience. Every technique serves the goal of keeping readers engaged—not through constant excitement, but through controlled variation that creates emotional resonance.
When you’re uncertain about pacing, read your work aloud. Where do you want to speed up? Where do you find yourself lingering? Your instincts as a reader often reveal what your instincts as a writer missed.
Master pacing, and you’ve mastered one of the most powerful—and least visible—elements of the fiction craft.
Last updated: December 2025.
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