Story Pitch: The How-to Guide for Using a Pitch to Create Your Story: Writer to Author, #2
By Scott King
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About this ebook
Struggling to start your story or lost in the middle? You need a Story Pitch.
A standard pitch is meant for marketing and selling, but a Story Pitch is a powerful tool meant to be used when pre-writing and writing. It can help you jumpstart your novel, screenplay, comic, or whatever type of story you are trying to tell and it can be used as a corrective measure if you get off track during the writing process.
In this book, you'll learn:
- The key elements to story
- How those elements are connected
- How to construct a Story Pitch
- How to use a Story Pitch for outlining
- How to use a Story Pitch to fix character problems
- How to use a Story Pitch when lost during writing
- How to use a Story Pitch for writing book blurbs
If you like honesty, no bull, a bunch of humor, and tons of examples in your writing guides, then you'll love Scott King's Story Pitch.
Buy STORY PITCH today and start writing your story!
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Book preview
Story Pitch - Scott King
Introduction
Word up? I’m Scott King and this is the introduction. That’s good ‘cause I like introductions. It’s where I get to be me and you get to be you. I’ll say something odd like, It only rains hot dogs on the coldest nights of summer,
and you decide whether I’m too weird for you to want to keep reading. You should keep reading though, because I have a lot of ninja craft stuff in this book.
What you need to know about me is fairly simple. I find poop jokes funny. I pay off my ridiculous amount of college loans through board game photography and writing. I enjoy teaching and, until we moved to coastal Texas to follow my wife’s career, I was a college professor at a four-year university. In life, I want to make a living telling stories that connect and move people. I also want to help people grow. I try to do that with my fiction in the themes and stories I tell, and I try to do that with my non-fiction by offering whatever tips I can to help people improve their craft.
Story Pitch isn’t my first book on writing. I have two others: The 5 day Novel and Finish the Script! The most popular chapter in Finish the Script! is about writing an elevator pitch, and one of the most asked about chapters in The 5 Day Novel deals with using a pitch as a tool for pre-writing and rewriting. That’s how the concept of a Story Pitch was born. I decided to merge what I know about pitching and using pitches as tools, into a system that writers can use to jump-start their stories.
This book is geared toward authors, but because of my screenwriting and comics background, I designed Story Pitch to be useful to anyone who creates fiction. The core of a Story Pitch is about finding the story you want to tell and whether you are writing novels, graphic novels, short stories, screenplays, or whatever, finding your story is important.
Do I expect using a Story Pitch will change your life and help you break into the top 100 on Amazon? No. Spoiler alert: there is no magic code or ingredient to solve all your writer problems. But using a Story Pitch can help make the process a bit easier and, with writing being as hard as it is, why not make it a bit easier on yourself?
The final thing you should know about me is one of my main teaching philosophies: the only wrong way to write is to not write. What works for one person creatively might not work for someone else and no matter what rules people like me tell you to use, the only real rule is that if you want to be a writer you must write. The only right way to write is the way that allows you to write your story. Fingers crossed, a Story Pitch will help you do that.
1
What is a Story
A pitch is
a description of a story that a person uses to sell it. In Hollywood, it might be that a writer is pitching a screenplay to producers, hoping they buy it. In traditional publishing, it might be an author pitching a novel to an agent who would then pitch it to one of the big six publishers.
Anytime you meet someone and they ask you about what you’ve written, whether it’s a novella, short story, or full-blown three-hundred-thousand-word epic, what you say back to them is a pitch.
Pitching is part of a writer’s world. No matter how much you might hate giving one, you can’t escape it. Book blurbs that appear on the back of a novel or on a retailer website are also pitches. They are carefully crafted descriptions meant to sell the story to a potential reader.
You can use a Story Pitch to create all the pitches I described above, but the main goal of a Story Pitch isn’t to sell the idea of your story to someone else. A Story Pitch is meant to be a tool you can use when pre-writing, writing, and re-writing your story.
Whittled down, a Story Pitch is a synopsis that introduces the key elements of your story, serves as a guide post while writing, and creates enough interest to hook the listener so they’ll want more.
Before writing a Story Pitch, you need to understand what story is. Growing up, I was told that story is rising action with a climax followed by falling action. It also has a beginning, middle, and end. (I have no idea why K-12 teachers always emphasize the beginning, middle, and end thing.) In college, I was told that story is made up of character, setting, plot, and theme. And in graduate school, I was told that story is formed from character arcs and character action. Most of what I was taught was a mix of half-truths and bullcrap.
I’ve found there are four basic building blocks of story.
At its core, story is a character that wants something and the conflict that prevents them from getting what they want. Those are the first three.
For example, if I said:
Jamie drank the water.
That isn’t a story. It is a character taking an action, but without any context that action is meaningless. However, if I said:
Jamie drank the water, hoping to flush the poison from her mouth.
That’s a story. It’s utterly simple and not very deep, but it’s still a story. You have a character: Jamie. She has a want: getting the poison out of her mouth. And there is conflict: she doesn’t know if the water will rinse the poison out.
Let’s do one more, but even simpler:
Mary sat. (Not a story)
Mary tried to sit. (Story)
A good gut instinct gauge on the two examples above is to ask if either makes you want to know more. In the first, Mary takes the action of sitting, but that’s it. There is no want or conflict. In the second we know Mary wants to sit, because she tried to, and we know there is some form of conflict because she tried to sit, but something stopped her from actually sitting. We don’t know what stopped her and already that is more interesting than the first sentence.
Although the core essence of a story is about a character wanting something and something else getting in the way of that want, there is one more thing involved. For example, what happens if a character doesn’t get the thing they want? That’s the stakes.
Remember Jamie? If she doesn’t get that poison out, she is going to die! Those are some big stakes. What about Mary? If she doesn’t get to sit… we don’t