Home » Writing Craft » On Sticking the Landing: “The End”

On Sticking the Landing: “The End”

posted in: Writing Craft 7
the end
Image by Colleen O’Dell from Pixabay

What is more disappointing than reading a good book—maybe even a first-rate page-turner—and then having the ending fall flat? I recently had that unpleasant experience with a work of a quite renowned author. The result was that I was left with an unsatisfied taste in my mouth as my final memory of the book, which otherwise I would have recommended. Think of an Olympic gymnast: she may perform like an aerial pixie, but if she stumbles on the landing, her score plunges. Yes, openings are important, yet maybe nothing is such a deal-breaker as a flat ending, because the author has no more chances to win you over.

The Last Word

The denouement is where everything gets wrapped up, all questions are answered, and the reader comes away grinning with pleasure, heart warmed and brain satisfied. Red herrings are exposed, seeming villains are revealed to be good guys, and we finally find out who done it. But not just who— why and how as well. The reader gets to feel smart because he figured it out, or else he’s flabbergasted by the surprise of it all.

There Is No Happy Ending?

That doesn’t mean the ending has to be happy. It may be quite tragic. But there has to be something proportionate about it in relationship to the novel that has gone before. A heroic gesture that redeems. A final success after all the failures. Some action or event that makes us go “Whew” with relief… because this had to be. A sense of rightness, even inevitability, accompanies a really good ending.

Certain modern novelists have rebelled against this Satisfying Ending, because they say that life is not so neat. Things are often unresolved, and poetic justice is all too rarely meted out. But art is not life. Many people read precisely to enter a world where things are a little neater (as well as more dramatic) than their everyday reality. Crimes are solved. The good are rewarded. People make sacrifices, even at the cost of their lives. Someone has said that reading fiction is the best antidote to being depressed by the daily news. I would add that that’s true even with a book that is depressing. Because there is a shape to a book.

And That’s the Way It Was

Don’t be afraid to linger over your conclusion, so that its full importance is felt. I had an editor tell me once that I had rushed through the final reveal until it seemed deus ex machina, even though it wasn’t. Nothing is less satisfying than a lovingly crafted read that stops dead and leaves you waiting for a conclusion. But, you know what? That’s not as easy to avoid as it seems. Timing slows down after the climax. The brief denouement may take a long time to spin out. It’s like a cool draft of water after a breakneck run. And yet we authors, who have spent months if not years on this book, are sometimes like a horse who starts galloping faster and faster as he approaches the barn.

While we’re mixing metaphors, keep that Olympic gymnast in mind. Give a brilliant performance (you always do), but be sure to stick the landing!

Follow N.L. Holmes:
N.L. Holmes is the pen name of a real-life archaeologist who writes books set in the Late Bronze Age in Egypt and the Hittite Empire. She grew up in a book-loving family, and as soon as she retired from teaching, she couldn’t wait to turn the events of history into fiction. Field excavation has given her a taste for the little details of ancient life. She lives in France and Florida with her husband and two cats. Website

7 Responses

  1. Shutta K Crum
    |

    Thanks, Niki–

    I always tell my writing students that your opening sentence has to be packed with $100 dollar words, but your ending needs to be packed with $1,000 dollar words! So important for any reader, but especially so for younger readers.

  2. Ann Henry
    |

    Thanks, Niki, for backing up my “words of wisdom” to one of my editing clients. I’m going to send this to him and hope he’ll pay more attention due to the double dose.

  3. Niki Kantzios
    |

    Thanks, Ann and Shutta. I’m glad to know that this resonated with experienced professionals like you.

  4. Sharon K. Connell
    |

    Personally, I don’t like unhappy endings any more than I like unfinished endings. There’s too much of that in the world as it is. When I read for pleasure, I want to feel good at the end of the story. My opinion. In my writing, I always try to have a great ending for the characters…with a quirk.

    And what a great metaphor. 🙂

    • Niki Kantzios
      |

      Hi, Sharon. I just saw your post. After all the tension of the book, there’s really nothing like a happy ending–where it works!

  5. Ken Pelham
    |

    Good, thoughtful post, Niki.

    Many of my all-time favorite books and short stories have happy endings. But many do not, at least not in an obvious way. All Quiet on the Western Front is a grim, riveting read from start to finish. The ending, on its face, is most certainly not a happy one. On the other hand, the Great War is over at last, and all is quiet on the western front, and you can still breathe that sigh of relief, and accept that the ending is absolutely true to the story that went before.

  6. Niki Kantzios
    |

    Gee, Ken–I just saw your post! Great example. Or Farewell to Arms.

Comments are closed.