Elements
Of A Successful Story
If
your novel or short story is going to work, it’s going to need
all the right components. Used without imagination or
sensitivity, those elements may produce only formula fiction.
But, like a good cook with the right materials and a good
recipe, you can also create some pleasant surprises.
Many writers, like many good cooks, don’t need to think
consciously about what they're throwing in the pot. But as an
apprentice you should probably think about how your story
matches up with the following suggestions. They all have to do,
essentially, with bringing your characters and readers from a
state of ignorance to a state of awareness:
Can our heroine find happiness as a journalist? We don’t know,
but we’ll find out. Can our hero found a family dynasty in the
Nevada wilderness? We don’t know, but we’ll find out.
1. In the opening—
Show us your main characters, or at least foreshadow them: We
might see your heroine’s mother getting married, for example. Or
we might see a crime committed which will bring in your hero to
investigate.
Show one or more characters under some kind of appropriate
stress. For example, if the hero must perform well under
enemy fire in the climax, show him being shot at in Chapter
One—and performing badly. If the heroine must resist temptation
at the end, show her (or someone else) succumbing to temptation
in the beginning.
Show us who's the “good guy,” who’s the “bad guy.” That is, in
whom should we make an emotional investment? Whose side are we
on? Even if the hero is morally repugnant (a hired killer, for
example), he should display some trait or attitude we can admire
and identify with. The villain can be likable but set on a
course we must disapprove.
Show what’s at stake. Editors and readers want to know
this right away. (That’s why the blurb on the jacket usually
tells us: “Only one person can save the West/defend the Galactic
Empire/defeat the vampires...”)What does the hero stand to gain
or lose? What will follow if the villain wins?
Establish the setting—where and when the story takes place.
Establish the area of conflict . If the setting is the
Nanaimo coal mines at the turn of the century, the area of
conflict may be relations between miners and owners, or within a
family of miners, or within a single miner's personality.
Foreshadow the ending. If the hero dies in a blizzard at the
end, a few flakes of snow may fall in the first chapter.
Set
the tone of the story: solemn or excited, humorous or tragic.
2. In the body of the story--
Tell your story in scenes, not in exposition. A scene contains a
purpose, an obstacle or conflict, and a
resolution that tells us something new about the characters
and their circumstances.
Develop your characters through action and dialogue. Show us,
don’t tell us, what’s going on and why (not He was loud and
rude, but “Get outa my way, you jerk!” he bellowed.).
Include all the elements you need for your conclusion. If
everything depends on killing the victim with a shotgun, show us
the shotgun long before it goes off.
Give your characters adequate motivation for their actions and
words. Drama is people doing amazing things for very good
reasons. Melodrama is people doing amazing things for bad or
nonexistent reasons.
Develop the plot as a series of increasingly serious problems.
(The heroine escapes the villain in Chapter 5 by fleeing into
the snowy mountains; now in Chapter 6 she risks death in an
avalanche.)
Establish suspense by making solution of the problems uncertain
(How will the heroine escape the avalanche and avoid freezing to
death in Chapter Seven?).
Make solutions of the problems appropriate to the characters
(Good thing she took Outward Bound training in Chapter One).
3. In the conclusion—
Present a final, crucial conflict when everything gained so far
is in danger and could be lost by a single word or deed: this is
the climax, which reveals something to your readers (and
perhaps to your characters) which has been implicit from the
outset but not obvious or predictable.
4. Throughout the story—
Remember that nothing in a story happens at random . Why is the
heroine’s name Sophia? Why is she blind? Why is her dog a black
Lab? The easy answer is that you’re the God of your novel and
that’s the way you want things. But if you have a conscious
reason for these elements, the story gains in interest because
it carries more meaning: For example, “Sophia” means “wisdom”
and the name can provide a cue to the reader.
Use
image, metaphor and simile with a conscious purpose, not just
because a phrase “sounds good.”
Maintain consistent style, tone, and point of view.
Know the conventions of the form you’re working in, and break
them only when you have a good reason to. For example, if it’s
conventional for the private eye to be an aggressive,
hard-drinking single man, you’re going to shake up the reader if
your private eye is a yogurt-loving, shy mother of three
school-age children. You’ll shake up the reader even more if she
goes around pistol-whipping people; as a private eye, her
behavior will still depend on her personality and limitations.
|