About this ebook
What do writers want from plot?
What do writers need from plot?
Are those questions the same? Not really.
As wordsmiths, we writers know that want and need are two different words.
The want is a circumstance that we writers can control. We want plot specifics to help us craft story and exceed reader expectations.
The need is a circumstance of obligations from reader expectations of story. While readers may want the comfort of the genre elements (the tropes), they also wish to have their interest and curiosity piqued.
Can we writers deliver on the expectations and the surprises in order to please our readers?
That's the involved question that Discovering Your Plot hopes to answer.
This guidebook covers plot structure and the necessities of genre expectations so we writers can anticipate what readers want.
- It is NOT a list of tropes by genre or even a list of tropes that every novel should have.
It does explore the six most common plot structures.
- It is NOT a list of characters for plot or story. It is not a list of the "17 characters your novel needs" or the "characters used by famous authors", as listed on social media sites.
It is a detailed examination of the major sections of a novel.
- It is NOT a word-based or page-based formula of a novel's structure.
By the end of Discovering Your Plot¸ writers will have the tools to construct a story as well as diagnose problems with pacing, tension and suspense, and sequencing events.
Discovering Your Plot is Book 6 in the Think like a Pro Writer series and the second of the Discovering set of how-to guidebooks for writers at all skill levels. While the approach is for newbies, every writer can benefit from this fresh look at any novel's framework.
The Discovering set covers Characters, Plot, Author Branding, and Sentence Craft as well as completing a Novel—from the seeds of idea to publishing the manuscript.
Writers Ink Books, the umbrella for M.A. Lee and her pen names, has published over 30 titles, fiction and nonfiction, since its 2015 debut.
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Discovering Your Plot - M.A. Lee
Discovering Your Plot
Think like a Pro Writer ~ 6
By
M.A. Lee
A close up of a logo Description automatically generatedDiscovering Your Plot
Think like a Pro Writer series / Book 6
Copyright © 2019 Emily R. Dunn
doing business as M.A. Lee & Writers’ Ink
First electronic publishing rights: December 2019
All rights are reserved.
No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. The unauthorized reproduction or distribution of this copyrighted work is illegal. No part of this book may be scanned, uploaded, or distributed via the Internet or any other means, electronic or print, without the permission of the author or of Writers’ Ink.
NOTE FROM THE AUTHOR
This book is a work of non-fiction. Any names, characters, places, and incidents of fiction and nonfiction are cited by the author merely as explanation. Any persons or entity, existing or dead, are also cited by the author for the purposes of explanation. The author does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for third-party websites or their content.
Published in the United States of America.
www.writersinkbooks.com
winkbooks@aol.com
Cover Design by Deranged Doctor Design
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Acknowledgements
Surviving stressful situations often causes us to wish to blank those events from our memories. The physical and emotional tolls far outweigh any perceived benefits. We trudge through, avoiding the slings and arrows
[1] cast our way, then shake off the dust on our feet [2], turn our coats around after a strong shake, and set our faces toward a new day’s sun and a new venture’s hope.
The shadows of that stress loom far into our futures. Only with time’s passage do we acknowledge lessons learned, benefits reaped, and opportunities received.
In many respects, the entire Discovering set represents the lessons, benefits, and opportunities resulting from my own three-plus decades of stressful situations. Only with time’s passage have the looming shadows become distant and non-threatening. Strange though it may be, in these seasons of Thanksgiving and Advent as I pen this guidebook, I thank those stressful years for resulting in unexpected opportunities.
Table of Contents
Discovering Your Plot
Acknowledgements
Introduction
What is story?
What is Discovering Your Plot?
What are the Major Sections of Story?
Genre Expectations
Story Length
10 Major Genres of Literature
Genre Tropes
Plotting Basics
Theme
Conflict
Scene and Sequel
Special Approaches to Plot
Plot Structures
Plot Structures for the Masses
Aristotle’s Plot Requirements
Shakespeare’s Plot Requirements
Freytag’s Plot Requirements
Complex Plot Structure
Basic Beats Structure
Plot Structure for Writers
The Archetypal Story Pattern
Stage 1 :: Ordinary World~ 7 Questions to Start
Stage 2 :: Call to Adventure ~ Destroy the Dear
Stage 3 :: Refusal of the Call ~ Fools Rush In
Stage 4 :: Meeting with the Mentor ~ Wiser Eyes
Stage 5 :: Crossing Thresholds ~ Change is a Constant
Stage 6 :: Tests, Allies, & Enemies ~ Constant Examinations
Stage 7 A :: Approach to the Inmost Cave ~ Nearing the Darkest Deep
Stage 7B :: Approach to the Inmost Cave ~ Entering the Cave
Stage 8 :: the Ordeal ~ Entering Personal Darkness
Stage 9 :: Rewards ~Joy after Darkness
Stage 10 :: the Road Back ~ Driving to Destiny
Stage 11 :: Resurrection ~ Dual Enemies of Evil and the Self
Stage 12: Return with the Elixir ~ Drinking with the Gods
Simple and Complex
Index
Introduction ~ A
What do writers want from plot?
What do writers need from plot?
Are those questions the same? Not really.
As wordsmiths, we writers know that want and need are two different words. The want is a circumstance that we can control. The need is a circumstance of obligations from outer elements.
Outer elements
sounds like alien intervention. Hopefully, we don’t compare our readers to extra-terrestrial aliens (ET go home
).
Need is reader-based. Readers have certain demands of story. Those demands are dependent on genre, which is simply a category of literature.
Plot depends on reader expectations of genre. Rote application of these genre elements, however, will disappoint readers. We writers need to craft enough surprises with the expected genre elements to keep readers reading.
Did I just cause confusion?
A] We have wants and needs with plot.
Writers want plot specifics to help us craft story and exceed reader expectations.
Readers have expectations of story. While they may want the comfort of the genre elements (the tropes), the readers also wish to have their interest and curiosity piqued.
B] Can we writers deliver on the expectations and the surprises in order to please our readers?
That’s the involved question that Discovering Your Plot hopes to answer.
Whether plotter, pantster, puzzler, or somewhere sliding around all of these, we can be easily tripped up by plot. The progression—beginning, middle, end—seems so simple. We just launch from our personal starting point, use workable methods to achieve our goals, and manage a coherent storyline.
Or do we? Is that plot coherent? It may be a rousingly good story, but did it achieve its end? The transformation of the protagonist? The reader’s epiphany? Did the middle sag? Did the opening not intrigue? Were threads hanging? Did the plot seem like a tangled knot of scenes? We may laugh, cry, cringe in horror, shrink in terror, rail in anger—but did everything fit? Weeks later, with our immediate emotional reaction faded before our second read, did the story make sense?
The common definition of plot is merely a series of events that make up a story.
Maybe our question should be What makes a story?
What is story?
The Oxford American Dictionary defines story as an account of imaginary or real people and events told for entertainment.
That’s not quite right.
Merriam-Webster’s offering of an account of incidents or events
is inadequate.
Story implies beginning / middle / end, the interplay of characters and events. Entertainment is not the only purpose.
Dictionary.com gives this definition: "a narrative (which means beginning / middle / end) either true or fictitious (yes!), in prose or verse (Thank you! Most writers don’t think of poetry as telling stories.) designed to interest, amuse, or instruct the hearer or reader; a tale." Thank you, Dictionary.com. We have all elements including reader expectations.
The plot is the beginning / middle / end narrative designed to interest, amuse, or instruct.
The three-part last element of plot harks back to reader expectations thousands of years old. Aristotle called it catharsis. The Latin Horace more accurately defined it is dulce et utile, sweetness and usefulness, purposeful entertainment.
Whatever story that we write, we should see connections to our lives, either through the character relationships or the situational events. We don’t want sermons; we do want insights (of which the best are hidden).
Interest is the first element. Without it, no one reaches the other two: amuse and instruct. Interest is the reason readers pick up our writing, read it from first to last page, then return for more of our writing.
The opening interest is genre expectations.
The beginning / middle / end is plot coherence with great writing and unexpected surprises.
Readers return to our other writing when they enjoy a satisfactory end to story and their approval lingers after the emotions fade. We want our readers to enjoy and learn from our characters and our plot.
So, these are the focus areas of Discovering Your Plot ~ genre expectations, plot basics, the traditional structures and the few variations, and the best structure to deliver consistent surprises.
What is Discovering Your Plot?
This guidebook discusses the necessities of understanding genre expectations so we writers can anticipate what readers look for.
It is NOT a list of tropes by genre or even a list of tropes that every novel should have.
It explores the most common plot structures.
It is NOT a list of characters every plot or story needs. It is not a list of the 17 characters your novel needs
or the characters used by J.K. Rowling and Stephanie Meyer and Suzanne Collins
, as listed on social media sites.
It is a detailed examination of the major movements of a novel.
It is NOT a word-based or page-based formula of the writing structure for a novel.
While the word counts for story lengths are given, I will not prescribe a word count or a page count for the major sections of a story of any length. A proven pattern of events with an organic development is the only prescription needed. Blocked-in page/word counts for story sections cripple our creativity.
When we create a projected word/page count for the work’s length, we remember that the projection is not a mandate, only a guide.
What are the Major Sections of Story?
The Beginning introduces situation, primary characters, conflict, themes, and setting. Story launches. Reader interest is captured.
The Middle offers complications and twists. The easier solutions of conflict resolution are offered and destroyed. New obstacles appear. Betrayals occur. Surprises keep readers engaged.
The End works toward more than conflict resolution. Epiphanies by the primary characters are unveiled. Irony in conflict and relationships and themes keep readers turning page after page until the very end.
Based on our projected word count, divide that total word count into thirds. We can fudge this division, yet we are basically setting the three major sections ~ beginning / middle / end.
That’s the basics.
Are we ready to begin the complex work of plot?
Genre Expectations ~ B
Genre is defined as a category of literature.
Walk into a bookstore or browse an online distributor. Very quickly we encounter the broad categories that help sort all of the books in manageable groups.
On one side is nonfiction: cookbooks, self-help finance vs. self-help psychology. Fiction crowds the other side: literary/contemporary, local interest, mysteries, fantasy and science fiction side by side with horror, and a small bank of shelves devoted to westerns.
The big box booksellers have larger areas but the same format. The local super grocery has a whole