Showing posts with label POV. Show all posts
Showing posts with label POV. Show all posts

Friday, February 23, 2018

Caution: story narratives under construction here

How many times have I blogged about ways to structure a narrative? Way too many! So I was at first hesitant about the topic of this week’s meeting at the Writers Guild of Texas: Structure. I ended by being glad to have braved a cold, rainy winter night to hear speculative fiction writer Monalisa Foster  talk about narrative structure the easy way. And in a way that translates more easily to short fiction than the classic three-act structure.

Foster’s way: as easy as 1-2-3. And then, 4-5-6-7. 

The 1-2-3 part stands for beginning, middle, and end. The beginning gets is own 1-2-3, the middle a round of 4-5-6, the end a 7. Do three plus seven equal a perfect 10? Score!
The beginning’s #1: a character in #2 a setting with #3 a problem. 
OK, so how do we let readers know who the main character is? “Giving a name is not enough,” Foster told her audience. We have to worm our way inside that character’s head. “Show us who she is and what she cares about. Otherwise, you’re just typing.”
And although she analyzed movie plots to illustrate her points, she was careful to note that “books aren’t movies.” Don’t forget the details, because, unlike scriptwriters, writers of fiction won’t have actors, location hunters, decorators, or music to fill in their characters and worlds.  And “it’s a character and details that pull readers in.”
image: pixabay
One character only? What about ensemble casts? “Even if the story is about a group, there is always one central character who everybody else revolves around,” was Foster’s take. 
And give that character a setting, not an empty stage, to stand on while we’re getting to know her. 
And about that problem – the one that opens the story “doesn’t necessarily have to be the main story problem.” Find a dilemma that will intrigue the reader, and build on it as necessary. 
Because that’s what the middle’s #4-6 are for. 
Which, by the way, can be expanded as needed, but the fairy tale rule of 3’s is a time-tested favorite narrative device.
Why not simply start in the middle, in media res, in the first place? The term means starting in the midst of an action, which is fine with Foster. Except that starting in the middle of things doesn’t mean the beginning can be neglected. All three of the beginning’s elements must still be included, because as the story’s true middle unfolds, the character’s problems are only going to get worse.
The elements unique to the middle are #4 the character’s attempt to solve the initial problem, #5 her failure (or her success, which only leads to a greater problem), with #6 everything now on the line as she makes a final effort -- the climax of the story. 
How the character solves, or tries to solve, her problems matters as well. Her attempts at solutions must be done in an intelligent way, Foster said, or at least, “the solution must make sense to the character.” 
“Whether or not she succeeds, things must only get worse!” Foster said. “Spray paint it on the wall!” because it’s through these repeated attempts, whether successes or failures, that the story’s character development and world building occur, and that it reaches climactic moment after which nothing will be the same, either physically or emotionally.
And that’s the end, right?
Wrong. “The climax is not the ending of the story,” Foster said. 
The ending is #7 validation. Or at least resolution.
“I’ll tell you a secret,” Foster said. “The ending is what sells your next story.” It can include tying up or at least acknowledging any threads left dangling from the beginning or middle, a “medal pinning” celebration/ceremony/party, and a “happily ever after” or “happily ever after for now” notice – the last two particularly important for any romantic elements involved in the plot. 
And now we’re really finished, right? Maybe. Or maybe not.
“Sometimes you need an epilogue,” Foster said, an after note that is either separated by time or space from the main narrative, given in a point of view different from the main narrative, or includes events outside that narrative. 
THE END
Yes, really, but check out Foster’s list of reference materials for more, more, and still more. And check the Writers Guild of Texas for more programs, including its spring workshop, April 28.

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Who's talking? And why should the past be perfect?

Let me make one thing clear up front:  those mysterious lights baffling pilots at D-FW International Airport this week were not lasers.  They were the sparks of glee I gave off when writing friend Robin Y. announced that, for the duration of NaNoWriMo, she was giving up first person and present tense.

Those of you who've tried it know that writing from a first person point of view -- letting a character, in all her shameless self-aggrandizement, tell her story straight to readers without letting them hear from other characters who could diss her -- is like running a marathon with arms tied behind your back.  Add writing in the present tense (think:  I go to the store) instead of the more common past tense (I went to the store) and you've got the equivalent of running in leg shackles.  It can be done.  Just don't expect to set any word count records.

Don't get me wrong -- there are wonderful reasons to use either a first person POV or present tense narrative.  First person is almost required for some genres, such as young adult, although the Harry Potter series stuck to third person and it seemed to do okay.  Harry Potter, of course, was a likeable kid.  Which brings up another major reason to write in first person -- making an unlikeable character palatable.  I used first person in my short story "Eight Seconds" to let a protagonist's questionable actions slide down, like a bitter dose sweetened with sugar.  Is that why it won a Western fiction contest prize?  Maybe, but I've also sold shadyside characters written in third person.

How about writing in present tense?  It's got video game-style immersion in the action to recommend it.  It also lets you write scenes that really are in the character's past in straight past tense instead of the cumbersome past perfect tense (I had gone to the store) that will get dings for slowing your narrative pace to a crawl.  But your inner editor will have to be turned to high, because present tense isn't how people usually talk.  And do you want an editor looking over your shoulder during NaNoWriMo?

Still insist you can't forego the intimacy of first person, the immediacy of present tense?  That's okay.  Because after you've logged your fifty thousand words and won your NaNoWriMo t-shirt, you can add them in revision.  It will require close reading of your manuscript.  But you'll have time for that after NaNoWriMo is over.  For now, though, lose the shackles.