Well, I'm still thinking on this topic, even if it has quietly fainted.
The initial question was how to get the reader from paragraph to paragraph. The answer above seems to be "story stakes & conflict." I said it. We all said it. While falling over ourselves to remark on Sherry's use of the word "paused" and why it didn't work in our collected view.
Sherry V. Ostroff wrote:... what does the writer do to more a story forward?... I mean the little things to get a reader to move from one paragraph to the next and to turn a page. Is it a certain word you add that creates questions (or bubbles of tension) that the reader wants answered?
j p lundstrom wrote:I think you will find most successful authors claim the conflict and the stakes are the heart of a story.
j p lundstrom wrote: That being said, there is no one who says that word choice is unimportant.
But there is someone who says it is important. As in, the most important thing. (ME!) Word choice doesn't stand behind stakes and conflict in a novel. Word choice is the only way we can create stakes and conflict. It is our one tool as writers. The rest is the product of how we choose to use words.
I find the catch-all mantra "the heart of the story is stakes & conflict" a flat bit of writing advice that could easily be poorly executed, now that I'm thinking about it. That's like saying what makes a good nation is "good people." What does that mean? I'm thinking it is a tad more involved than that. "Stakes and conflict" don't appear out of thin air. They have to be crafted.
Now WHAT might we use to craft stakes & conflict (and tension)? Cotton balls? Bits of tissue paper? Hm... I know! WORDS. 
Words are the fundamental element of story-telling. If I was going to make a story recipe, I would toss three things in my bowl: pages, ink, and words. From that I might bake some conflict.
Films rely on stakes and conflict, yes? Which are translated to the viewer through excellent camera shots, a good soundtrack, the right actors, tricks with color (Schindler's List), close-ups contrasted against wide panoramic scenes punctuated by the film's main soundtrack. It's in those juxtapositions & artistic decisions that the tale is delivered -- the tension is amplified by such choices.
Well, what I'm saying above is, we have to do everything a film accomplishes (and more!) -- the visuals, the camera angles, the details, the acting, the close-ups, the speaker's volume -- through the words we choose, the punctuation we apply, and the way we choose to focus the reader's attention with both. We don't get to create tension with music. We create music with the single and solitary tool we have: written language.
We get readers to the next paragraph by using words WELL. And sure, part of what we want words to do is to convey a sense of tension (or time passing, or any of the varied human emotions that can universalize the reading experience.) I agree on that. Without a good story, we have lots of words that potentially say nothing at all pretty well. But the question is "how do we get readers to the next paragraph?" Finesse with words. Knowing the craft.
Two authors writing the same story with the same stakes will write two completely different novels. That's the voice. That's the art.
Charles Frazier. Ian McEwan. George Saunders (please read Lincoln on the Bardo and tell me that man doesn't have a distinct style). J.R.R. Tolkien. Colson Whitehead. Jodi Picoult. Jane Austen. Alison Weir. Edith Wharton. Ernest Hemingway.
J.P.
Sherry.
Vern.
Corra.
Different voices. Why? Because we took those tools and used them differently. One would hope.
J.P., you say most successful writers would say conflict and stakes are at the heart of the story, but would these same writers say anyone could have written their novels -- or would they protest that their indelible fingerprint is on the pages? Why? What is their fingerprint? Is it the stakes?
Do we read to the next paragraph because we must know the answer to the scene's dramatic question -- or because we trust the author to write the answer to that question in a satisfying way? It isn't the question that gets us, really. It's the belief that by plowing through this paragraph, and this one, and this one, we will be delighted on our way to an answer we trust will inevitably please us, or convince us, or surprise us, or move us. Are we going to trust an author to take us there if the author fumbles through words, focuses everywhere but where it matters, relies on gimmicky alliteration and a large, fumbling vocabulary to convey mood, and writes in generalizations? Are we willing to go to the next paragraph if the one that preceded it proves the author's worth, even if and especially if the author uses sprawling sentences in the middle of a tense scene?
I won't demure with a "but what do I know?" because I do know.
What gets me to the next paragraph is a belief that the author is in complete control. After that, depending on the genre, absolutely, stakes and tension keep me going. But the heart of it is the author's ability to control her craft. I don't believe the stakes if I don't believe the author. The tension isn't effective if it reaches me through a gasp. I have to believe it's real. I have to trust the authenticity of whatever the author is saying, even if that author is telling me there is such a thing as a little tiny half-person with big feet named a hobbit. I have to so trust the author's voice I don't question this. That happens through words. That is the heart. And if we as writers don't know this fundamental truth about writing, we need to spend a lot more time closely reading.
I don't think you can separate a novel's words from its stakes and conflict and say one is "not something anyone has said is unimportant" and the other is "the heart of story-telling." The words give birth to everything else.
Pardon me. I shall be off now to dust the hedges and think fancily about the word grumbit.