How many words per chapter should a fantasy novel have? I can only manage 1000 per chapter right now. I wonder if that's publishable.
Bleh, I'm struggling with this myself. My story is split into 3 parts. Part 1 has chapters of about 4,000-6,000 words. Part 2 has tiny chapters of about 2,000 words. Trying to figure out what to do with this. Maybe just split the Part 1 chapters in half? I'm beta-reading a novel right now that has very short chapters, only one scene for each. It's YA, though, so I feel it's okay. As I understand it, High Fantasy tends to be pretty wordy and High Fantasy publishers want to see length. Not sure though. I'm curious to see what others say about this.
Well, as a quick basis for comparison, if you've got a 100,000 page manuscript with 25 chapters, that leaves 4000 words per chapter. But I think the answer is less of a "rule" than the following: everything in a novel should be as long as it needs to be. Every aspect should make its point, and no more. A novel, fantasy or otherwise, is a contrived piece of work; a well oiled machine. Everything should work exactly as intended and try to do no more. That goes for characters, exposition, and maybe even chapter length. Thats my opinion on it at least!
As many as you need; personally, I always thought of how many pages rather than words was needed in a chapter. It really depends on how significant or attention is needed for a particular part within the story. Hell I've seen some chapters in different books be as long as 2-3 pages just because a particular event needed it. But you can can balance it out like the others in this thread have suggested.
How are you deciding where to make your chapter breaks? Are you doing one scene per chapter? That's not mandatory, obviously, so if you want your chapters to be longer you could just put more scenes into each one.
I put my chapters based on organizing the events & plot and theme of those chapters. Maybe If I use different characters, i would put different chapters. Hope this helps.
Whenever time passes, a scene or perspective changes, etc. A chapter doesn't have to be a set length; it could be a paragraph or two long, if that's what the pacing of your story calls for. Does it feel right? Then it's probably the "right" length.
I agree with the rest here. I usually go by page count, not word, but in what is for me a relatively short manuscript I've completed recently (89k words, 300 pages, 18 chapters), I had some chapters which ranged five pages, ten pages... and two behemoths that were 42 and 38 pages. Organize your mind more or less like this: a section finishes an action, a chapter finishes a full thought, a part (if you're using them) finishes a story arc, and a novel brings the end of the event it all lead up to.
I've done a little Googling on this and here are the general guidelines I've found: On average, a chapter is about 10 pages, give or take. 10 pages of printed novel equals around 250-300 words per page. So per chapter, 2500-3000 words. But this is all approximate, and if you have a chapter that ends on a cliffhanger at page 6, why not? It's all about the pacing of your story.
Honestly in the end it's completely up to you... I've seen books with 5 page chapters and books with 30 page chapters. So long as you've shown what you wanted to in that passage your work is complete. You choose the length and the end point so it really does not matter much. Rewrites tend to lengthen the chapters as well.
I'm not really the type to end a chapter in the middle of a scene. There's a few different ways I like to do my chapters My favorite- The chapter ends when the scene ends. 2nd favorite- Chapters relate to a goal/plot point 3rd favorite- Chapters represent a change of location. I hate the idea of thinking of it as page length. Hell... I've seen a 2 page chapter before, and it worked. Chapters are stopping points, but also dividers. Where do you want your readers to be able to pause and pick up again from?