3 Edgy Little Tips to Make Your Story More Compelling

If you've studied the Six Core Competencies, you already know they comprise a set of requisite elements and skills that will get your novel into the hunt.  A weakness in any one will seriously compromise your shot at finding a publisher or audience.


 But that's all they are.  Despite being non-negotiable benchmarks.


 There is also a set of underlying story "physics" – qualitative essences that define the reading experience — that comprise the stuff of artistic merit, even genius.  Like Bernoulli's Principle of fluid/aerodynamics is what allows an airplane to actually fly, it is not the airplane itself, nor its wings or engines.  That part comes from Boeing.


 It's just the requisite physics.  The ones that Mr. Bernoulli defined in 1738, some 65 years before the Wright Brothers applied them to flying machines.


 With stories, those physics include dramatic tension, pacing, reader empathy and intrinsic appeal at a core conceptual level.


 An author's command of both realms of storytelling – the understanding of those literary physics in combination with their implementation through the six core competencies – that become the difference between a story that really works and one that, despite having all the core competencies competently checked off, disappears in a crowd.


 That, a little luck and a fat promotional budget.


 It's about the little things. 


 Creating a total package that doesn't just add up, it exceeds the sum of the parts.


 It's also about consistency, balance and choices.


 Here are three little ways, from a long list of other little ways, that will help raise your story to heavenly heights.  These reside on top of the layer cake that comprises the Six Core Competencies of Successful Writing.


 Think of them as frosting, only with protein and vitamins and propensity for addiction.


1. Give your hero an interesting career.


With the exception of the detective genre, you get to hire your main character into any job you want.  Sometimes that decision is driven by the content and context of your story… pathologist, politician, doctor, etc.


Other times, when the job isn't central to the story, you still have an opportunity to give them something interesting to do during the work day.


The key here is to make what they do interesting.  Something that says volumes about who they are, where they've come from, and how it defines their world view and current state of mind. 


This aligns with vicarious reading experience law of literary physics, versus making the hero's job as mundane and vanilla as the reader's.


2. Give your hero a distracting personal relationship.


It's easy to get lost in a one-dimensional landscape of characterization as we thrust our heroes into the heat of our stories.  But real life isn't like that.  And while it isn't always the best idea to make your story a mirror of real life, it can be good to give your hero something else to think about.


Like, a relationship.  A love affair.  A parent thing.  A boss issue.


The idea here is to make this relationship distracting for the hero.  Something that provides a reason to survive, or keep one foot in the here and now as they go about saving the world.


 Welcome to your sub-plot.


Superman had Lois Lane.  Otherwise he's just someone who, if we're honest about it, we can't really relate to.


3. Give your antagonist a noble goal.


Or at least a goal that began nobly, or one that springs from a sympathetic need.


One dimensional bad guys (no gender applied here) are easy and tempting.  But when you give them something that causes us to wonder what went wrong, they become even more interesting.


In the film, The Island, Michael Bay's homage to science fiction excess, the bad guy (played perfectly by Sean Bean) wanted at the core of his being to rid the world of childhood disease.  And, it should be added, to get filthy stinking rich in the process, moral compass be damned.


Of course, if your antagonist is a tornado or a flood – a perfectly legit storytelling option, by the way – then never mind.  Never met a sympathetic natural disaster… so in that case try to burden your hero with a pesky inner demon that must be conquered before the dike can be built.


The inner demon thing is a good idea for any hero, by the way.  When that inner demon has a twist or an edge that makes the going tougher for our hero, so much the better.


Thinking about publishing your story on Kindle or iBook?  Finding the process a bit confusing?  Then you need to read and consider this.


3 Edgy Little Tips to Make Your Story More Compelling is a post from: Larry Brooks at storyfix.com

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on May 03, 2011 00:11
No comments have been added yet.