Showing posts with label 10 Second Tip. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 10 Second Tip. Show all posts
Monday, February 24, 2014
Sunday, February 23, 2014
Stuck on a SHORT Story?
10 Second Tip:
Stuck on a SHORT Story?
Stuck on a SHORT Story?
Stuck on what to put in your story?
-- This is the list of things I check off when I create a story:
Do you have a Setting in mind?
-- This is the list of things I check off when I create a story:
Do you have a Setting in mind?
- - Sci-fi
- - Historical
- - Modern day
Do you have ONE big Main Event for the story to focus on?
- - A battle
- - An escape
- - A love scene
- - An act of revenge
- - A sacrifice
- - A treasure to claim
Do you know what you want to SAY with your story?
- - Love sucks.
- - Friendship is forever.
- - No good deed goes unpunished.
- - A snake can only ever be a snake.
- - Sometimes you have to take chances.
Do you know where you want to END your story?
- - A wedding?
- - A funeral?
- - A bloody battlefield?
- - An empty street?
- - The bottom of an ocean?
Do you have your three central Characters ready?
Just to make things interesting, any one of these three could be the Hero, the Villain, or the Ally.
- - A main character that personifies what your story is trying to say?
- - A main character that personifies an opposing opinion of the same topic?
- - A buddy / friend/ love interest of one or both to personify Joe Normal stuck in the Middle?
Why did I mention Characters Last?
Instead of making a story for my characters, I do the opposite. I make characters for my story.
Some people can come up with a cool character and then build a story around them. Sadly, I am not one of those. I can build a back-story just fine, but my back-stories are never good enough to be the Main Story. A back-story is how a character GOT his Issues. The main story is how they FIXED those Issues. See the difference?
Anyway...
-- When I'm stuck on a story, I try thinking on these questions and often, they'll jog something loose.
Enjoy!
Some people can come up with a cool character and then build a story around them. Sadly, I am not one of those. I can build a back-story just fine, but my back-stories are never good enough to be the Main Story. A back-story is how a character GOT his Issues. The main story is how they FIXED those Issues. See the difference?
Anyway...
-- When I'm stuck on a story, I try thinking on these questions and often, they'll jog something loose.
Enjoy!
Saturday, February 22, 2014
What KIND of story are you telling?
10 Second Tip:
What KIND of story are you telling?
EVERY story is in fact a tale about the relationship of an individual
(your main character) to society -- symbolized by their workplace,
school, their immediate or extended family, the gang they belong to, a
best friend, a lover...
- A comic story (one with a happy ending,) describes an isolated individual achieving social integration either by being accepted into an existing society or by forming his own. This integration is often symbolized by a wedding or party.
- A tragic story (one with a sad ending) describes an integrated individual who becomes isolated. Death is simply a symbol of this isolation.
Keep in mind...!
-- The plot should keep us in suspense about what kind of story we're reading.
- Even if we already know it's a comedy, the precise nature of the comic climax (the punchline that carries us to the happy ending) should come as a surprise.
- If we already know the hero is doomed, his downfall should be caused by a factor we've been told, but didn't realize was significant.
Don't give everything away by the fourth chapter! A story we can guess the ending to before we're done is NOT a story worth finishing.
Enjoy!
Morgan Hawke
www.DarkErotica.Net
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