What Makes a Good Story?
Good writers often break rules—but they know they’re doing it!
Here are some good rules to know.
1.Theme
A theme
is something important the story tries to tell us—something that might help us
in our own lives. Not every story has a theme, but it’s best if it does.
Don’t get
too preachy. Let the theme grow out of the story, so readers feel they’ve
learned it for themselves. You shouldn’t have to say what the moral is.
2.Plot
Plot is
most often about a conflict or struggle that the main character goes through.
The conflict can be with another character, or with the way things are, or with
something inside the character, like needs or feelings.
The main
character should win or lose at least partly on their own, and not just be
rescued by someone or something else. Most often, the character learns or grows
as they try to solve their problem. What the
character learns is the theme.
The
conflict should get more and more tense or exciting. The tension should reach a
high point or “climax” near the end of the story, then ease off.
The basic
steps of a plot are: conflict begins, things go right, things go WRONG, final
victory (or defeat), and wrap-up. The right-wrong steps can repeat.
A novel
can have several conflicts, but a short story should have only one.
3.Story Structure
At the
beginning, jump right into the action. At the end, wind up the story quickly.
Decide
about writing the story either in “first person” or in “third person.”
Third-person pronouns are “he,” “she,” and “it”—so writing in third person
means telling a story as if it’s all about other people. The first-person
pronoun is “I”—so writing in first person means telling a story as if it
happened to you.
Even if
you write in third person, try to tell the story through the eyes of just one
character—most likely the main character. Don’t tell anything that the character wouldn’t know.
This is called “point of view.” If you must tell
something else, create a whole separate section with the point of view of
another character.
Decide
about writing either in “present tense” or in “past tense.” Writing in past
tense means writing as if the story already happened. That is how most stories
are written. Writing in present tense means writing as if the story is
happening right now. Stick to one tense or the other!
4.Characters
Before
you start writing, know your characters well.
Your main
character should be someone readers can feel something in common with, or at
least care about.
You don’t
have to describe a character completely. It’s enough to say one or two things
about how a character looks or moves or speaks.
A main
character should have at least one flaw or weakness. Perfect characters are not
very interesting. They’re also harder to feel something in common with or care
about. And they don’t have anything to learn. In the same way, there should be
at least one thing good about a “bad guy.”
5.Setting
Set your
story in a place and time that will be interesting or familiar.
6.Style and Tone
Use
language that feels right for your story.
Wherever
you can, use actions and speech to let readers know what’s happening. Show,
don’t tell.
Give
speech in direct quotes like “Go away!” instead of indirect quotes like “She
told him to go away.”
You don’t
have to write fancy to write well. It almost never hurts to use simple words
and simple sentences. That way, your writing is easy to read and understand.
Always
use the best possible word—the one that is closest to your meaning, sounds
best, and creates the clearest image. If you can’t think of the right one, use
a thesaurus.
Carefully
check each word, phrase, sentence, and paragraph. Is it the best you can write?
Is it in the right place? Do you need it at all? If not, take it out!
The best stories have a strong theme, a fascinating plot,
a fitting structure, unforgettable characters, a well-chosen setting, and an
appealing style. Try for all of these.
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Regards,
Ms. Sneha Patel
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