I am
delighted to share a post from Storyfix, a wonderful blog created by Larry
Brooks. He has generously agreed to let me post it here and to stop by off and
on during the day. If you don’t subscribe to Storyfix, I highly recommend you
do. Larry offers great advice for those of us working on the craft of writing.
I often finish reading one of his pieces and think, “Oh, no wonder my scene
doesn’t quite work.”
I have cut and pasted bits
of Larry’s bio from his website.
Larry is a novelist/blogger/freelancer/workshop speaker. His
first published novel, DARKNESS BOUND, was based on one of his original
screenplays. It debuted in October 2000, spending three weeks on the USA Today
bestseller list. His second novel, PRESSURE POINTS appeared to good reviews in
December 2001, with comparable sales. His third novel, SERPENT’S DANCE, was a
February 2003 release from Signet, also well reviewed despite selling like
parkas in Pakistan, and his fourth, July 2004’s BAIT AND SWITCH , earned a
starred review from Publishers Weekly, who named it their lead Editor’s Choice
for that month, and at year-end to two of their notable lists: Best
Overlooked Books of 2004 (the only paperback so named; perhaps, says Larry, a
dubious honor) and Best Books of 2004 (lead entry, mass market).
Since then he has written two novels: SCHMITT HAPPENS (the
sequel to 2004’s BAIT AND SWITCH, and WHISPER OF THE SEVENTH THUNDER,
an apocalyptic thriller from Sons of Liberty Publishing (March
2010).
In late 2002, Brooks’ script for the adaptation of DARKNESS
BOUND was named a finalist in the Don and Gee Nicholl Fellowships in
Screenwriting, sponsored by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences,
the folks who bring you the Oscars. It was one of ten scripts selected out of
6044 submissions,.
Brooks has been developing and teaching writing workshops since
the mid-1980s. He has been named a Mentor by the Oregon Writer’s Colony,
and continues to teach at workshops around the country His new book, “STORY ENGINEERING: MASTERING THE SIX CORE COMPETENCIES OF SUCCESSFUL WRITING was released in early 2011 from Writers Digest Books, based
on the popular developmental model upon which he bases his workshops.
THE SEARCH FOR STORY is coming out from Writers Digest Books
early next year.
Please
join us in thinking through the points Larry makes in this post. It’s long,but
worth the read. All comments are welcome and encouraged!
Larry takes is from here.
You may have heard
that. In fact, you may have heard that from me, either by virtue of
having me evaluate your story, or through your own interpretation of the story
architecture principles I espouse here.
It may confuse you.
It may even piss you off.
Not everyone
understands the difference between a principle and a rule. Truth is, there are
no “rules” in art… but we can lay no claim to art until the principles that
underpin effectiveness have been put into play.
That’s not a paradox
as much as it is a major lightbulb going off. If you haven’t heard that
glorious little “click” yet, keep reading, I’m pointing you toward the on
switch.
In storytelling,
however, what we do have instead of rules are options. Creative
choices. And for those — to ensure that we don’t shoot ourselves
in the foot — we have principles.
Principles are there
to keep us safe, to empower our work.
When someone tells you
your story structure is weak, it usually means one of the following: pacing is
sluggish… not enough tension… no discernible character arc… too one
dimensional… not complex or layered enough to sustain interest. Dull as
dirt.
Truth is, you’ll
probably hear one of those dark critiques before you’ll hear about your
structure. But pay attention to both,, because one is cause and the other
is effect.
Structure is the means
toward pace, tension, arc, depth and compelling interest. It is the
roadmap, the paradigm, that allows them to happen in an optimal way. To
mess with structure — to believe you can make it up as you please — is to put
these outcomes at risk.
The more you
understand about cause and effect in your fiction, the better your stories will
be. The principles of story structure set you free to be great.
Step off a cliff and
you will fall. Do it with the right gear, something that mitigates the
very physics you seek to defy, and you have a shot at living to leap another
day.
Really? Why
can’t we simply write a story any dang way we please?
We can… provided the
story aligns with the basic principles of fiction. Trouble is, basic as
the principles are, too many writers don’t consider them when facing the very
choices in a story that will define its ultimate effectiveness.
They just write it.
Something comes to them in the flow, and they put it in. And then
they move on.
Think of every
airplane you’ve ever seen. There are hundreds of designs, sizes and
shapes. Some have two wings, some have four, some barely have any.
Some have propellers, some don’t, some have weird tales, some are shaped
like a flying pachyderm. Some don’t even have pilots.
There are no rules.
But… they all align
with certain principles, or they cannot fly.
Same with our stories.
Why do certain things
need to be in certain places, in a certain order, and in specific context to
other certain things?
When you see this —
story structure itself — as an application of principles rather than a
constriction borne of rules, then you’re onto something. This shift is
perhaps the most critical milestone is a writer’s development, because without
it one remains alone and without a compass in a sea of creative choices that
will drown your story in a heartbeat.
Principles, not rules,
give us access to the physics of storytelling.These universal literary forces
don’t care if you understand them or not (kind of like gravity and the
certainty that the sun will rise in the morning), they will always be there to
influence your story, to either drag it down or lift it up… depending how you
apply them.
What do bestselling
authors know that you don’t? It isn’t the freedom to break what you
might perceive to be rules. Rather, they understand the awesome power of
applying the principles of literary physics within a story. It is the
certain knowledge that it is the principles themselves that bestow freedom to
our choices, in context to the certainty that to violate them is a sure route
to literary suicide.
If that sounds harsh,
it won’t once you understand what specific principles I’m talking about here.
If you don’t recognize them as essential, then you don’t understand
fiction.
And if you want to
call them rules, in that case… it doesn’t matter. They don’t care,
they’ll still kill you if you ignore them.
Here are the best of
those principles.
A story without a hero
to root for will not work well. We don’t have to like our heroes (as
readers), but we do need to root for them to keep us engaged.
Conflict — dramatic
tension — is what makes a story more than a character study. Plot is what
gives characters something to do… and what your characters do becomes the optimal
way to illuminate character. Thus, these two elements of story physics —
dramatic tension and hero empathy — depend on each other to work.
Compelling pace is
more effective than stories with misguided pace.
The more vivid the
world you create, the more vicarious the experience you deliver to your reader,
the more succcessful the story will be.
These aren’t rules,
they are principles of story physics. Understand the difference.
That’s my belabored,
over-written point today. Understand the difference.
The real issue isn’t
the physics, it’s the author’s relationship with the physics of
storytelling…which include a compelling premise or concept, dramatic tension,
pace, hero empathy, vicarious journey, and strength of execution (the latter
being the goal of, and the sum total of, the Six Core Competencies of
successful storytellingg.
When, perhaps
unknowingly, or from a desire to break rules and do something you believe to be
out of the box, by definition you are thus confused about what commercial
creativity even means. It’s almost impossible to cite an example of a
story that has proven successful without those physics in play.
Better, then, to
understand how to harness these story forces to make your story as good as it
can possibly be within parameters of your own making.
Sometimes you get
lucky, you tap into one or more of the elements of story physics intuitively as
you unspool your narrative, but more often you succeed when you are conscious
of these forces and don’t allow yourself to settle… when you push your story
with a view toward optimizing the very forces that will give it wings.
And how do you do
that?
By understanding the
elements, context and mission of story architecture, as it manifests on the
page via structure.
Where you start, what
comes next, what comes after that, what and where and why to twist and evolve
the story, how to end it… you optimize them not from the pure genius of your
learning-curve savvy intuitive self, but from a proactive application of the
role and inevitable presence of story physics in your vetting of, and
ultimately your selection of, the elements and moments of your story.
Story structure isn’t
a rule. It is the means toward freedom to create without risk.
It is a set of principles that are illuminations
of the truth about what makes a story work.
Larry
5 comments:
Comments on Larry's thoughts? He's up for a good discussion.
Okay, let's try again. I just messed up that comment. :) I just got home, my first chance to check out the blog today. Fantastic post, Larry and Cassy.
I'm one of of those writers who doesn't analyse well. I just write the story as it needs to happen. And it's worked out well, but imagine if I applied these ideas. I could make the story even stronger. Thanks for the post. I'm going to print it out and study it more. And I loved the airplane analogy.
June 21, 2012 3:02 PM
I agree with Larry whole-heartedly. When I read a story for someone or judge a contest, I can't tell you exactly why it doesn't click with me. I just know it doesn't. Larry has put a name to it. The story structure is weak. Like Anita, I will print this out for future reference. Thanks, you two.
Larry, Antia, Liz and all you others who I know are checking in but don't post. I really like the level of Larry's discussion. Let's continue with topics such as this. We can really help each other.
Post a Comment