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 explores 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.