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Suspense is the element that authors use to try to leave the reader hanging, trying to figure out what will happen next, especially when the author does this at the end of the book without actually telling what happens. This leaves a particularly strong effect.

Suspense is what gives the reader the "on-edge" feeling. Suspense builds in order to make those final moments, no matter how short, the most memorable moments in the work. For example, in The Road by Cormac McCarthy suspense builds constantly. Then at the points in the book where there is actual external conflict, the moments are short and yet lasting. The suspense in a story just keeps the reader hooked into reading more until the climax is reached and the thrill and amusement of the suspension finally comes to a close.

The suspense of a story may be the point at which the reader feels more eager to know the end, and what would happen next, it is often referred to in literature as the climax or the top of the story; when characters and events reach a high complexity. The suspense in the story is the most important element that was never ignored by writers throughout the ages.

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10y ago

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