I met with a writer-friend the other night and spent a couple of hours, discussing plot.
This woman has wonderful characters with incredibly detailed backstories. She’s lived with the characters for six years or so. She has written thousands upon thousands of words, scene upon scene. She has three books wavering around in her head.
Her problem was that she didn’t have a beginning, a middle, and an end, for the book she’s presently working on. As she told me about the story, I saw a plot emerge. We determined that a story has to start with a character in conflict. That character has to want something. And someone or something has to stand in the character’s way.
The easy way to do a plot is to have the character work toward her goal, and fail. She can plan and fail and land in worse shape, over and over, until she finally has learned enough along the way to defeat the foe and achieve her goals. If she is, at that time, tempted to turn back the story will be even stronger than if she defeats her foe without any inner struggle. The black night of the soul makes the climax all the better. If the protagonist sacrifices something she wants, in order to serve the greater good, we will cheer.
This is a very easy plot to work with.
But my friend didn’t have this kind of story. Her story pulled me along because there were so many questions I wanted answered. But in the middle of the book my friend lost her grip on the story. One reason for this is that the conflict the character faces at the beginning of the book does not have anything to do with the conflict she faces at the climax.
There is a reason for this. At the beginning of the book the character doesn’t know who she is. She can’t know what she’s working for as her big goal, because she has woken up with amnesia. So her first conflict is that she doesn’t know who she is and the story is very interesting because of all the mystery that surrounds her.
My friend and I discussed the plot and we decided that the character has to figure out who she is and then she has to take off on the new goal. She has to have a new conflict. Once she remembers who she is, she has to go to work trying to defeat the problem she had before she lost her memory.
It will work.
Not all stories have to be written like a hero’s journey. Not all protagonists have to hear and heed the call to adventure. Not at the beginning, anyway. Or you might have several smaller calls to smaller adventures, before you get to the one adventure that will carry you to the climax.
All that matters is that the story is interesting.
But it’s nice to know that no matter what kind of story we have, if we get lost, we can always look at what we have, and we can plug in elements we know we need—desire, conflict, plans, set-backs, and finally success—and bring the book back on track.
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Where do you get your ideas for the books you write? That’s a question every author gets and one that often frustrates them. Many don’t know where they got the idea for a particularly story? Do we remember three years later, when we finish the fourth draft, where the germ of the original idea came from? And when we compare the fourth draft to the first, how can tell when the final idea took root out of the mess that was the first draft?
I was thinking about metaphors and similes and idioms the other day. Clichéd phrases work as a kind of shorthand. When we hear them, we don’t even think about what they are literally. We think about what they mean.
I quickly deleted that. Talk about putting a gruesome picture into someone’s mind. It says the same thing as killing two birds with one stone, and it breathes new life into a cliché. But at what cost? I would have stopped my reader dead, filling her mind with the picture of cute baby seals being clubbed.
Ten dollar bills, I thought, would provide much more writer motivation than quarters. Stephenie added that if they were in a clear glass container, we could look at them and be encouraged to write, write, write.
There is a difference between message-driven fiction, and fiction that leads readers to discover a message. One drives and the other…well…leads. Which would you prefer: having someone stand behind you, poking you with a cattle prod, or having someone stand in front of you, holding out a

