Tips for fiction
writers.
What elements do you need
in a story outline?
a. A focal
character.
b. A situation
in which this character is involved.
c. An objective
that the Character wants to obtain.
d. An opponent
who strives against the Character.
e. A climactic
disaster on which to hinge the resolution.
Write with feeling. Feeling is the place every story starts.
The physical story starts
the day something is different for the main character. There is always a problem
and a goal to reach from page one.
The actual story starts when
the main Character takes on the problem.
Write with description (but
don’t go on and on forever). Let the reader experience the story as vividly
as if they were living it. Use the senses as common denominators of human experience. Put these senses in terms of action and movement.
Use picture words. Use active verbs, verbs that show something happening. Work
with nouns that are specific, definite and concrete.
Show, don’t tell a
story.
Do not use repetition. Rehashing usually occurs during the middle part of a story when the author has run
out of necessary information to move the story forward. Often they have the character
repeat actions from the beginning of the story. More on. Change. Add new elements and twists.
Build a story with scenes
and sequels. A scene is a unit of time and conflict lived through by the character
and the reader. A sequel is a unit of transition that links two scenes.
A scene structure is, goal,
conflict, disaster. The sequel is, to translate disaster into goal, to check
reality and to control tempo.
Changing viewpoint causes
the tension to drop.
Flashbacks stop the forward
movement of the story.
Foreshadow your story’s
climax. The climax gives the reader the final conclusive proof of what the focal
character deserves. Resolution sets forth what he gets.
Next month I’ll continue
with the elements of writing.
Keep writing and I’ll
see you in print