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Articles and Information About The Writing and Storytelling Process
Bob Mayer is the author of The Fiction Writers' Toolkit. He has published 30 fiction books and has two million books in print, translated into eight languages. He is a regular teacher and speaker at the Maui Writers' Retreat and Conference. He says there are six important questions to consider when writing a novel (this applies even more so to films.). They are: 1. What do I want to write about? 2. What do I want to say about it? 3. Why do I want to say it? 4. Why should anyone else care? 5. What can I do to make them care? 6. What do I want readers to think or see? Mayer said, "What I have found is that most writers can answer the first three, but not the last three. The last three focus on the reader, while the first three focus on the writer." The purpose of technique and structure is to ensure that you create a story that serves the reader. That is, your story should have them wanting to know what happens next, while taking a character on an emotional and spiritual journey of change. The writer must learn to see the story from the reader's perspective. This doesn't happen by accident. It takes craft, practice and discipline to craft the outpourings of your imagination into a form that other people will want to read. Ninety per cent of novels and screenplays are rejected because of poor structure. Mayer says that in order to construct a successful novel or screenplay a writer must be able to do two contradictory things. The writer must be able to see the possibilities of a story and at the same time be able to see how it all fits together. Most people struggle to do both with their own work. The whole point of a structure process is to enable you to expand the possibilities of your story and at the same time make sure it works as an organic whole that resonates with your reader. Mayer says, "Very few novels in the bookstores were written in a vacuum. Help should be an ongoing thing. To get adequate help, you need someone who is not only good in the area you are lacking, but someone who is willing to put the time and effort in to do a realistic and good job. The problem with a novel is that it is very large and a one hour discussion isn't going to do you much good." You need to be able to see the big picture of your story and how it works, and at the same time be able to detail the steps and scenes of your story in a detailed, compelling and logical way. So that the action of the story and the character journey both ring true for the reader. This requires a dance between structure and the imagination. Elisabeth George, the New York Times, best-selling author, puts it this way. She said, "An event alone cannot hold a story together. Or can series of events. Only characters effecting events and events effecting characters do that characters learn something from the unfolding events and the readers learn something too. A character is revealed slowly by the writer, who peels away one layer at a time." "You must have events that occur as the conflict unfolds, and these events must be organised with an emphasis on causality. If they aren't organised without an emphasis on causality, what you end up with is either a picaresque novel in which we explore episodes of someone's life without there being relationship between these episodes, or characters engaged in a tedious search for a plot. Characters in search of a plot is just bad writing." Ideally, you want to write stories where everything fits together in a compelling, entertaining and original way. It should also expand the readers' consciousness of how they view the world. The process is simple, but by no means easy. Articles About Writing For more information about the courses Unlocking
Creativity The
Novel and Script Course - First
Draft
Full list of Writers' Studio Courses.
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