hearwritenow homepage

 

ARTICLE

Plotting your story - structure




     
hearwritenow homepage

Word 4 Writers Courses and E-guide

Books & News

Back to Article index

Reviews by Elsa Neal

About Elsa Neal

Fun Stuff

Related articles:

Plot versus Character

Create a multi-dimensional character

Crafted writing

Freewriting

Planning versus freewriting

Unblock by writing flash fiction

Related reviews:

The Artist's Way by Julia Cameron

The Right to Write by Julia Cameron

On Writing by Stephen King

 

 

 

First, an old analogy that will help you to understand how “plot” differs from “story”. “The king died. Then the queen died.” is a story. “The kind died, and the queen died of grief.” is a plot. The plot gives reasons and explanations, ties up loose ends and coincidences, and gives a story a satisfying conclusion.

The structure of a basic plot is usually made up of a beginning, middle, climax, and ending. Most good plots are a series of situations and reactions, leading to new situations and further reactions. The beauty of fiction is that you can develop the exact same plot starting point, but have a completely different story due to the vastly different reactions of different characters. 

The beginning

The best place to start a plot is shortly before a point where your main character has to make a choice or solve a problem, comes into conflict with someone or something, or is forced into a situation against his will. Whatever the situation, the character has to react, and the plot has been put into motion. Thereafter, as the character progresses, he has to overcome new obstacles on his way to a solution. 

The middle

Depending on the length of your story, the middle is where you introduce sub-plots and minor characters. 

Sub-plots can help to move the main plot along to its conclusion, by adding details and past information, usually something the main character wasn’t previously aware of. Sub-plots can also be used effectively to push the main plot off the tracks to add layers of obstacles, mystery, and suspense, to intrigue your reader and keep them turning the pages to find out how the story will be resolved. 

Minor characters add an element of the unknown to the story. How will the main character react to them and their actions? Will they try to prevent the main character from reaching his solution? How do the main character’s reactions drive the story?

Remember to keep the story moving forward in situations and reactions. Something happens, a character reacts, their reaction causes a new situation.

The story climax

What was the choice the main character had to make at the beginning of the story? Where have your character’s actions and reactions led the story to? What do you need to introduce and change to bring this choice full circle at the climax?

Remember that there is a fine line in fiction between a clichéd plot where everything falls perfectly into place and the reader sees it coming a mile away, and a plot that mimics real life too much and just ends in the middle of nowhere without wrapping up any loose ends. Somewhere in between is a juicy plot that wraps things up just enough with a clever twist and leaves the reader on a quest for your next book. 

The ending

Some books end with the climax. Many, however, contain a very short section following the climax that simply concludes the story and leaves some brief clues as to what may happen to the characters in the future. It helps to round off the story and give the reader the feeling that they’ve read about “real” people who have lives beyond the book. 


copyright © Elsa Neal 2006

This article also features on BellaOnline.



For more help with working out your plot, try: 

20 Master Plots And How to Build Them by Ronald B. Tobias

Plot & Structure : Techniques and Exercises for Crafting a Plot That Grips Readers From Start to Finish by James Scott Bell

The Plot Thickens : 8 Ways to Bring Fiction to Life by Noah Lukeman 




More writing related articles

Go back to the Articles Page

Read Elle's blog

    Related links:

Getting started writing


Do you need a fresh set of eyes to read through your manuscript?



Jennifer Stewart offers Home Study tutorials and professional writing services. For help with your writing, visit Jennifer Stewart's website at Write101.com


 

 

 

 

 

     

Home | Word 4 Writers Course | Books & News | Articles | Reviews | Biography

Art Gallery | FAQ | Australia | Other Links | Site Map

 

Questions or comments about this website?

Content copyright © Elsa Neal 2004-2008. All rights reserved.