Grumble: About Secrets

Something that I find uncomfortable which comes up from time to time, especially in first-person stories:

In order to create suspense for the reader, something significant is kept secret from the main character, even though doing so has the potential to stress her out or even panic her unnecessarily.

I'm not talking about situations where the secret or comedy-of-errors or practical-joke-gone-wrong is what triggers the plot. If that's what it takes to make the story work, it's most likely not an option to do otherwise.

What I'm thinking of are times when a character is put through something of a crisis for no apparent story-related reason. The incident that triggered this, FWIW, is the current chapter of Megan's excellent Sarah Carrera series, where it turns out that the stage fright that the title character went through before her first concert might have been eased if her best friend had been present backstage, but Sarah had been told that the friend had been forced to stay home.

Did it ramp up the suspense? Sure. Can one argue that making our heroine do this without her friend's backstage help and encouragement will make her more confident and self-reliant in the future? Perhaps, I suppose, if one wants to stretch the point. But it just doesn't seem to be the logical time or place to do this, with so much at stake for her, and that makes it hard for me to believe that someone -- in this case, her father, who's also her agent -- would make that decision just to preserve a pleasant surprise for her once she's back offstage later. (Granted, her father hasn't made the best decisions in the past, so it's not necessarily out of character for him. But nobody in the story even thinks about this.)

Anyway, this isn't a unique case; I've seen it happen in several stories here. In one series, posted a few years ago, mentors who were clearly intended to be sympathetic characters seemed to be constantly spoofing a heroine whose mental health was already in question. Eventually I couldn't take it any more -- it seemed sadistic and pointless -- and it was probably the main reason I stopped reading that story.

The moral, I guess, is that if an author feels the need to create suspense that way, she ought to make sure there's some story-related reason for it, rather than simply a plot convenience. And if it's a flawed (or villainous) decision by one of the characters, the point should be addressed when the secret is exposed.

My two cents, anyway.

Eric