By Janice Hardy, @Janice_HardyIf you're ignoring story structure, you could be making a huge mistake.Every novel has structure, whether you outline it or pants it. Stories have followed a basic "beginning-middle-ending" structure since people started telling them. It’s familiar and comfortable for readers, and helps them lose themselves in the tale.
Story structure is a valuable tool that helps us write, keeps our stories tight, and provides a framework for us to express ourselves. It's how people tell stories, and we see it everywhere—including jokes.
I've heard writers dismiss structure as being "too confining" or "
a template that stifles creativity," but I disagree. It's not going to force your story into a predictable template unless you use a structure with very specific turning points that don't allow for variety, or be too literal in how you use the turning points of any given structure. A "dark moment" just means "the protagonist's lowest emotional point in the story," and that can be anything.
Continue ReadingWritten by Janice Hardy. Fiction-University.com
Published on June 20, 2023 03:00