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by: www.GetPlotted.com
Secrets of the Plot
The one overriding principle you have to remember when
creating a blockbuster of a plot is to avoid randomness.
A good story is a chain of events, and each link in the
chain is bound to other links (otherwise it isn't a
chain!). This is worth repeating - whether it is an
event, a character or place name, or a motivation, think
it through and create it for a reason, not randomly.
Keep asking yourself '' why''. Your readers will
certainly be doing the same, and if you have created it
with a logical reason behind it, they will accept it, no
matter how implausible it may actually be. Done
correctly, this way of plotting will also steer the
reader firmly towards the climax, and this, of course,
is important if you want to write a ''page turner''
bestseller novel.
Most plots are based on the idea of the character under
pressure. Your hero has a problem, and how he/she solves
it IS the story. You must always be careful to keep the
character ''in character''. For example, if your hero is
a violent vigilante, he probably doesn't solve the
ultimate puzzle using his flower-arranging skills.
Unless, of course, you have already prepped the reader
by explaining, for example, that the hero's zen teacher
helped him control his violent temper with Japanese
flower-rituals... You can automatically create
consistent character outlines at www.GetPlotted.com with
just 1 click of a button. And you can keep on clicking
till the character is perfect for your purposes!
You want your audience to empathize with your character.
If you can't achieve this, you at least want them to
understand the character. In the example above,
revealing a traumatic childhood event may help the
reader understand why the hero is a violent vigilante,
even if they still don't truly empathize with him). The
character's motivations, therefore, are prime. If the
reader doesn't believe or accept the motivations you
expose, they won't believe the character either, and you
are wasting your time. No real motivation turns your
drama into melodrama.
There is even a case for claiming that the plot of a top
novel is the sum of the subplots of all the characters
in it. The interplay between the individual existences
of the characters is what moves plot forward. In terms
of starting a plot, the rule of thumb is to begin as
close to the climax as possible. In other words, there
can be lots of ''history'' before the story begins that
can be revealed to the reader as the actual plot
unfolds. The Lord Of The Rings is a classic example -
the history of the story extends several thousand years
before the opening scene. You also want to begin on an
''inciting incident''. A '' big bang'' if you will, from
which the plot stems. Bilbo giving Frodo the Ring in
LOTR is such an inciting incident. This
''foreshadowing'' is vitally important when writing a
good plot. Anything important MUST be foreshadowed, be
it a character, an event or location. Some writers go so
far as to claim that the entire first half of a book is
foreshadowing - a prophecy of what is to come in the
second half of the book. The second half, of course, is
the fulfillment of the prophecy. If you randomly
introduce ''solutions'' without foreshadowing simply to
solve problems you have created, you will lose your
audience fast.
Having said that, you must be subtle. If you give too
much warning of what's coming, the reader will get
bored. The standard way of doing this is to de-stress
the importance of what you are foreshadowing so that
when the surprise comes, the reader is not totally
''gob-smacked''. And by the way, if the characters in
the story can't see it coming, but your readers can, you
may lose them.
That word - surprise - is important in good plotting.
You should keep your reader guessing to some extent
until you reveal a solution, and then the reader should
be left with a ''doh'' moment - an understanding that
you gave him all the clues he needed and he STILL did
not see it coming. The ''6th Sense'' movie is a classic
example of this. By the end, and final twist, everyone
in the cinema had a ''doh'' moment, because with
HINDSIGHT it was obvious what was going on. Roughing out
the plot with the unique Plot Cards (tm) system at
www.GetPlotted.com will help you get the speed of the
action right, as well as easily organize your idea into
a consistent logical and readable structure. Setting the
right pace will also help keep your readers in a mild
sense of info-overload, so that surprises are easier to
spring on them even though you have foreshadowed
properly.
The role of the hero in your plot develops over time. At
some stage, the hero must assert control (even in, for
example, a tragedy, where the hero dies, the very death
should be an act of control - the ending of ''Leon'' is
a prime example of this). Generally, the hero must be
''roused'' i.e. he/she is subject to events at first but
then is roused to take charge and asset control over
events. The moment when the hero starts to take control
is known as a ''counterthrust'', and there may be many
of them in a good plot as hero and villain struggle for
control. A good scene will present some problem or
obstacle for the hero, and how he solves it determines
whether your reader goes on to read the next chapter.
The solving of these challenges is the counterthrust.
Often, a good plot features a problem, a counterthrust
which fails, and then a new attempt to resolve the
issues using the lessons learned.
Plots also server an ancillary purpose. The events that
unfold should express some aspect of the character's
personality, they should reveal something about our
heros and villains to us. By putting your character
under stress with plot, your characters come alive, with
the opportunity to show bravery, resourcefulness, and
all the other human traits. And this final tip is worth
re-reading - if you give your characters characteristics
without expressing them through plot, it is as
meaningless to your reader as some braggart in a bar
claiming to be a ''kung fu expert''. Believability is
the condensation of characterization via plot
consistency. Ignore that at your peril!
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