The Four Fiction Writing Questions
I bought some software last night to help constructing stories.
In
the help file I found a useful note on the four questions we need to
ask ourselves about a story before we start writing. These questions
help clarify our idea and also let us know whether we have a story that
is compelling enough to start work on.
Many ideas falter at this
stage - which can useful because doubt can alert you to the weaknesses
in an idea and to stop you from pursuing a story that may lose impetus
half way through.
We all know there's nothing worse than
starting a story, then running out of steam when it seems to go nowhere
or end up in a hole. Getting stuck during the writing of a story is no
fun at all!
However, answering the following questions can also help you solidify an idea into a story worth telling.
Question One: Who is your main character?
Often
we may be tempted to think that it's a combination of characters that
make a story interesting. True - but usually not from the reader's point
of view.
Readers like to identify with just one person - usually the one with the most to lose in the story.
You need to be able to personalize your story and show it from a protagonist's perspective.
And don't think you can have a story to which you can bolt on any old character. It doesn't work that way.
Effective
fiction is character driven. You need to have a person in mind - a
fictional type at least - and get to know them well. See this as your
first task in any story writing pursuit.
Character first. Who are
they? What do they want? What do they look like? Where do they live?
What do they do? What is important to them?
Think through all of these aspects before you ponder anything else.
Question Two: What is he/she trying to accomplish?
For years now I've been saying that it is 'agenda' that defines a character's purpose and effectiveness in a story.
A
fictional personality in a story must want something - whether that be a
new car, a sexy girl, to save his family, to cure cancer, anything, as long
as it is an easily identifiable goal, and something a reader can
identify with.
Characters who do not have goals - even nebulous and seemingly inconsequential aspirations - are not interesting to read about.
If
you've ever started reading a story and lost interest it's usually
because either you don't care about the main character's agenda - or you
haven't been able to identify it.
Hence, when answering this
question, make sure you come up with something compelling to the
character, and make a decision to weave the opening of your story in
such a way that the reader will be aware of the primary motivation of
the protagonist within the first page - at least.
And, when
editing, try to place your hero in the act of being in their world AND
demonstrating their agenda in the very first paragraph.
Question Three: Who is trying to stop him/her?
As
you will know - at least from having it repeated to you often - there
is no drama (that is, no compelling reason to be captivated by a story)
if there is no conflict. And in order to have conflict you need
characters' agendas to be at odds with each other.
There may be a
hundred and one obstacles to a hero's journey throughout a story but
the easiest and best way to consolidate those obstacles is to personify
them into an antagonist.
Yep, the bad guy. Now, this character
doesn't have to a serial killer or an evil scientist - but he/she does
need to be a serious threat to the main character's agenda.
There's little point to a story where the protagonist gets what they want easily and with no significant hurdles to jump.
We
all know this instinctively - though it may seem formulaic to you to
simply insert a bad guy because Rob says it's a good idea...
However,
research has shown that stories are way more effective, entertaining
and ultimately satisfying to readers if there is someone the protagonist
must defeat in order to win his/her prize.
This is true in any
genre, whether the antagonist is a natural disaster, a rival lover, or
even a set of unhelpful circumstances.
Think hard about this
question because the more compelling the antagonist's agenda, the harder
the hero will need to work, grow or change to achieve his/her goals.
Question Four: What happens when he/she fails?
This
question is crucial because it defines your story idea. If there are no
consequences to a character's actions and reactions, then there is no
'point' to a story. Again, we know this instinctively, yet often we may
fail to grasp its fundamental importance.
In the most blatant
scenarios, the death of characters close to the protagonist are the most
dreaded consequence. The death of the hero too, is an obvious bad
thing!
It could be that smaller, less catastrophic events may be
significant to your story. The loss of a lover, failing an exam, or
losing a treasured possession. Whatever your frame of reference is not
the issue.
The real issue is that within the context of your
story, the consequences of your hero's failure should be monumental to
your main character.
And that the attainment of your hero's goals
in the face of adversity - the more difficult the better - is at the
heart of good storytelling.
I hope this article helps you when thinking through your next story idea.
It's certainly helped me already!
Keep Writing
Rob Parnell's Writing Academy
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