Most stories have the potential for more than
one storyline or plot, and that can produce a rich tapestry as long as the threads
are chosen well and woven properly.
A basic definition of plot is what happens
in a story, or, more precisely, the main events. The bigger events, whose
impact is usually on the main characters, form the main plot. The lesser events,
whose impact is more on secondary characters, form the subplot, of which there
may be more than one. When revising your story, one question to consider is: Does
the subplot overshadow the plot?
If this is the case, the reason may lie in the strength, or
lack thereof, of the main characters. If so, consider how to strengthen
the main characters. If they’re right for the story as-is, look closer at the
secondary characters. They may be more integral to the overall work than first
appeared. If so, consider changing the balance of characters and storylines. Selecting
new narrative threads can create an entirely new design.
Share your writing
journey and queries on plot and subplot with Word for Words. Happy writing!
Editor's Blog for Writers – Continuously Published Since 2008 Jon Landau — Music Critic, Manager, Record Producer
By Adele Annesi
Word for Words is by author Adele Annesi. For Adele's website, visit Adele Annesi.
Pages
Friday, February 5, 2016
Saturday, January 16, 2016
The Writer's Voice of Experience
Stevenson Dam, CT |
One factor that shapes a writer’s voice is her experience, not just those that are formative, but the ones that are transformative. This doesn’t necessarily mean the writer keeps rewriting her own story in different forms, although that’s sometimes true. It means that writers usually write best with their experience, thought not from it. But can voice be cultivated, or is it a gift?
Voice isn’t something that’s created so much as revealed, and nothing reveals it better than when the writer writes what she’s passionate about. Sometimes it takes a few paragraphs, pages, chapters or even an entire novel to unearth this discovery, but when you get there, you'll know it. The moment may come at a turning point in the story, through a simple setting description or even in a seemingly insignificant scene, but when you find your voice you’ll suddenly feel the story and characters come alive.
Share your queries on voice and your writing journey at Word for Words.
Saturday, January 9, 2016
Great Resources for Writers
Boston at night |
Atomic Reach: Based in Toronto, Atomic Reach for bloggers uses its specially designed technology to change how people tell stories. AtomicWriter adapts feedback based on the bloggers’ audience to help them craft great blog posts.
AWP Writer to Writer Mentorship Program: AWP's Writer to Writer matches emerging writers with published authors for three months. Writer to Writer is free for mentees. Mentors volunteer their time and get a free one-year membership. The program is for all AWP members, especially underrepresented writers who don’t have an MFA.
Connecticut Public Television (CPTV): Around for more than 50 years, CPTV offers opportunities for writers to publicize their work and propose programming. This is especially true of its respected and award-winning educational programming for audiences in Connecticut and beyond.
Catapult: This innovative publishing venture geared toward emerging writers includes print and e-book publishing, classes, online writing and a platform for writers to share work and better their craft. Catapult also supports established writers by sharing revenue from classes they teach and paying to publish their work online.
Vox First Person: Vox is a general interest news site that devotes a section of its site to personal narratives on key topics. If you have a great story on an important issue, you can pitch it to Vox First Person, which seeks stories from writers of every age, gender, race and political view. They even work with new writers who have an important story but need help turning it into a piece.
WordTango: WordTango is an online community by and for writers that provides a community of classes, events and online networking to share tips, stories and contacts. Happy writing!
Monday, December 28, 2015
Apex and Nadir: The Peak and Valley of Story and Character
Each story and character has a highest and
lowest point, and it can be useful for the writer and writing student to assess
these points to determine whether there is sufficient differentiation between them.
Writers should plan the plot points of a story, or at least trace them after the story is written, to assess the story’s pacing (the speed at which it moves forward) and progression (the degree to which the plot unfolds along the way). However, it’s also important to compare the story’s apex and nadir. Apex, in this context, can be its climax; more likely, it is the story’s most complex and interesting point. Conversely, the nadir is the point at which all seems or is lost.
Here are points to consider when assessing whether there is enough differentiation between and development of these two points.
For the apex, describe what is happening in the story at its most complex and interesting point. List the major theme and subtheme present at this moment. Briefly outline how the reader might expect the story to unfold afterward. Also briefly outline how the story does unfold.
For the nadir, describe what is happening at the story’s darkest moment. Consider whether the main theme is adequately addressed. Briefly outline how the reader might expect the story to unfold afterward. Also briefly outline how the story does unfold.
Compare the apex and nadir to see whether there is sufficient differentiation between the two points. There should be enough of a distance between them for the story to be a real journey, not a plot that makes the reader feel he or she is running in place.
Also consider whether there are other possible outcomes at one point and/or the other. Include the setting in your consideration.
Since this approach also works for characters, the writer can follow the same approach for the primary and key secondary roles to see whether there has been enough character development.
Writing students can use this approach for literary analysis and criticism to understand how writers bring stories and characters from the start of a work to its completion.
If you have questions on the apex and nadir stories and characters or other writing queries, email Word for Words.
Happy writing and happy New Year!
Adele Annesi is a writer, editor and teacher whose writing appears in Banking the Bacon: Essays on the Success of Women and in Now What? The Creative Writer's Guide to Success After the MFA. For one of the country’s most instructive one-day writers conferences, visit Ridgefield Writers Conference.
Photo: Adele Annesi, Boston Harbor |
Writers should plan the plot points of a story, or at least trace them after the story is written, to assess the story’s pacing (the speed at which it moves forward) and progression (the degree to which the plot unfolds along the way). However, it’s also important to compare the story’s apex and nadir. Apex, in this context, can be its climax; more likely, it is the story’s most complex and interesting point. Conversely, the nadir is the point at which all seems or is lost.
Here are points to consider when assessing whether there is enough differentiation between and development of these two points.
For the apex, describe what is happening in the story at its most complex and interesting point. List the major theme and subtheme present at this moment. Briefly outline how the reader might expect the story to unfold afterward. Also briefly outline how the story does unfold.
For the nadir, describe what is happening at the story’s darkest moment. Consider whether the main theme is adequately addressed. Briefly outline how the reader might expect the story to unfold afterward. Also briefly outline how the story does unfold.
Compare the apex and nadir to see whether there is sufficient differentiation between the two points. There should be enough of a distance between them for the story to be a real journey, not a plot that makes the reader feel he or she is running in place.
Also consider whether there are other possible outcomes at one point and/or the other. Include the setting in your consideration.
Since this approach also works for characters, the writer can follow the same approach for the primary and key secondary roles to see whether there has been enough character development.
Writing students can use this approach for literary analysis and criticism to understand how writers bring stories and characters from the start of a work to its completion.
If you have questions on the apex and nadir stories and characters or other writing queries, email Word for Words.
Happy writing and happy New Year!
Adele Annesi is a writer, editor and teacher whose writing appears in Banking the Bacon: Essays on the Success of Women and in Now What? The Creative Writer's Guide to Success After the MFA. For one of the country’s most instructive one-day writers conferences, visit Ridgefield Writers Conference.
Saturday, May 16, 2015
Poet Sally Nacker on Inspiration and Healing
Sally Nacker, poet |
Sally received her MFA in creative writing (poetry) from Fairfield University, and her poetry collection, Vireo (Kelsay Books 2015), has been a finalist, a semifinalist and an honorable mention in three poetry book prize contests. She is a frequent visitor to the Emily Dickinson Museum in Amherst.
AA: What was the inspiration for Vireo?
SN: Poems throughout my collection, Vireo, have been largely inspired by nature. That is the foundation for most of the work. Interwoven throughout my observations of nature are elements of joy, loss, love and grief. The collection also includes poems I composed on paintings to which I have felt drawn. In the end, the death of my mother was my ultimate inspiration.
AA: What primary obstacle did you encounter in completing Vireo, and how did you overcome it?
SN: A huge obstacle occurred when I became aware that I had accidentally described the red-eyed vireo's nesting and feeding habits inaccurately in two major poems. This sudden realization happened a few months after my mother died. I was in my last semester of graduate school, completing my thesis. I felt my collection (thesis) finished and was searching for its title. I began reading Audubon's notes on the red-eyed vireo in detail for ideas and then realized my mistake: In two major poems, I had the red-eyed vireo nesting in a birdhouse and feeding at a feeder. The red-eyed vireo, in fact, builds its cupped hanging nest onto the forks of branches, and eats fruit and insects.
Vireo, by Sally Nacker Book jacket by Kathleen D. Michaud |
AA: What primary lesson did you learn during this project?
SN: I learned what I had always felt: Art is organic, and within art accidents can be gifts. I could not have come up with the poem "Vireo" without the experience I just talked about. If it had been an idea before I wrote the poem, a manipulation of sorts, the self-discovery would not have taken place, and neither "Vireo," the poem, nor Vireo, the collection, would exist.
AA: Is there anything you'd like to add?
SN: I received my MFA in January 2013. Vireo was accepted for publication in October 2014 and published in February 2015. During the two years between graduating and publishing, Vireo was a finalist, a semifinalist and an honorable mention in three book prize contests. Along the way, I added new poems I had written that deepened the collection, and changed the ordering of the poems. My mother's death sent me into a profound grief that was released the moment I received word of Vireo's acceptance for publication. The book needed to be released in order for me to heal.
Vireo can be purchased on Amazon, at Barrett Bookstore in Darien, CT, and Books on the Common in Ridgefield, CT.
Sally Nacker will be at Poetry by the Sea: A Global Conference in Madison, CT, on Tues., May 26, at 4:30 p.m. Or visit her at Sally Nacker.
Friday, May 1, 2015
2015 Ridgefield Writers Conference Offers New Workshops and Resources
Now in its
third year, the Ridgefield Writers Conference will offer new workshops,
resources and guidance for writers, starting Friday evening, September 25, and
running through Saturday, September 26, at the Ridgefield Library, with keynote
speaker Lary Bloom.
Based on the
workshop model of the MFA in creative writing, the Ridgefield Writers
Conference offers practical instruction in the craft and art of writing, with
new workshops and resources, panels on publishing and the writing life, agent
queries, readings, and wine and cheese networking receptions with and for
attendees and guests. This year’s faculty includes Michael White and Chris
Belden for long and short fiction; Sonya Huber and James Chesbro for memoir,
nonfiction and creative nonfiction; and Karen Osborn and Adele Annesi for
storytelling and cultural narrative.
The keynote
speaker for the 2015 conference is author, columnist, teacher and playwright
Lary Bloom, author of The Writer Within. Described by Wally Lamb as a writer with
“a sharp eye and a warm heart,” Bloom also authored the Connecticut Notebook
and co-authored The Test of Our Times. His columns have appeared in Connecticut
Magazine the Hartford Courant and The New York Times. Bloom has also taught at
Fairfield and Wesleyan universities and Trinity College.
As with last
year’s event, the Friday evening readings with Shamus Award-winning author
Peter Spiegelman and author Sonya Huber are free and open to the public,
including a wine and cheese networking reception hosted by co-sponsor, the
Ridgefield Library. Also free and open to the public are the Saturday afternoon
readings by attendees and guests, and a wine and cheese networking reception.
Book and resource tables and book signings are available throughout the conference.
The
Ridgefield Writers Conference runs from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Friday, September 25,
and from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday, September 26. For registration and full
information, visit Ridgefield Writers Conference, contact Adele Annesi or call 203.894.1908.
Wednesday, March 25, 2015
Remembering Your First Love: The Amateur Writer
When writers fall out of love with the habit of
writing, it may be because we've forgotten our first love.
Whether or not a writer is published, or has been published recently, there’s a sense in which all writers should retain an amateur standing. The word amateur can mean anything from one who has a taste for something to a lover of something. It can also mean a dabbler, as opposed to a professional. Regardless of a writer’s status, all writers are, in this sense, continual amateurs, because we’re always learning from other writers and ourselves.
While there are almost as many reasons as there are writers to stop loving the craft and art of writing, one way to squeeze the love out of the relationship is to let it become more about obligation than discovery and joy. We start focusing on what we have to do or should do, and all by deadlines, often self-imposed, that often get pushed further and further into the future the harder we try to meet them.
Regardless why the love has been lost, one way to rekindle it is to take the pressure off. Open a page and write. Even if the process begins largely with lament, at least the words are there. Reawakening the real pleasure of writing often comes afterward, from tinkering with the words and discovering new methods of expression, even in a grousing journal entry well-written.
What’s keeping you from your love of writing?
Whether or not a writer is published, or has been published recently, there’s a sense in which all writers should retain an amateur standing. The word amateur can mean anything from one who has a taste for something to a lover of something. It can also mean a dabbler, as opposed to a professional. Regardless of a writer’s status, all writers are, in this sense, continual amateurs, because we’re always learning from other writers and ourselves.
While there are almost as many reasons as there are writers to stop loving the craft and art of writing, one way to squeeze the love out of the relationship is to let it become more about obligation than discovery and joy. We start focusing on what we have to do or should do, and all by deadlines, often self-imposed, that often get pushed further and further into the future the harder we try to meet them.
Regardless why the love has been lost, one way to rekindle it is to take the pressure off. Open a page and write. Even if the process begins largely with lament, at least the words are there. Reawakening the real pleasure of writing often comes afterward, from tinkering with the words and discovering new methods of expression, even in a grousing journal entry well-written.
What’s keeping you from your love of writing?
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