I recently came across an article you wrote about the Gothic story
structure. ... Your article was incredibly
straight forward and informative. Do you have any resources you would recommend for
aspiring ... authors to ensure they are hitting all
the wickets? -- J
Sadly, there's not a whole lot out there on the
different types of Plotting Structures. Most of what is available is
somewhat...simplistic derivatives of Aristotle's 3 Act Structure for a Tragedy, Freytag's Pyramid, and The Hero's Journey based on Campbell's
'Hero with a Thousand Faces.'
Unfortunately, those structures only cover a small amount of very
common, very basic stories.
Certainly not what I wanted to write.
So, what I did was outline the plots of some of my favorite
stories from books and movies to figure out their plotting
patterns. This is
how I came up with the Gothic plot, the Fairy Tale plot, and the
Romance plot patterns.
(INTJ here. We're all about creating patterns.)
This is something you may want to try yourself. Treat it as an exercise!
Plotting Your Own Story Structures
This exercise will allow you to build your own plot structures that
you can use to make your own unique stories.
Pick out 3 of your favorite movies and/or stories.
Outline
the plots into Four main Acts. (Only Tragedies end in the Third
Act.)
Make it as simple as possible; leave out names and details.
Base Example:
1) Trouble Begins
Set up and character intro, plus hints of darkness.
2) Falling Apart
Struggling to figure out what's going on.
3) Crash and Burn
They know what's happening and they can't stop it.
4) Rise from the Ashes
They fight to survive.
Keep in mind that most movie scripts are far more compact than
the average book; only a Novella; 60,000 (60k) words, in length where
books tend to start at 100,000 (100k) words, so expect book outlines to be longer and far more detailed.
After you make your outlines:
Look for what is Similar and what
is Different in your outlines.
Look for missed steps, and doubled, or even tripled
steps in each Act.
-- More often than not, whole scenes are repeated a minimum
of three times, but with different results. Often played out with
three different characters. (Stephen King does this a lot.)
Once you get the hang of this, plot out different genres.
-- Notice how the stages of each Act change --often drastically-- between the genres. For example; an Adventure story won't have near as many Emotional Impact scenes as a Romance.
Don't forget to Experiment along the way!
-- Sometimes a bit more repetition here, and a longer emotional breakdown there can make all the difference between something common and boring, and something completely new and fresh.
Hopefully this proves helpful!
Morgan Hawke
You should teach creative writing (or write book about it) - your articles are amazing.
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