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Structure

Structure. Story form. The basics of any story. “two dogs fighting over a bone”--Kazan “the human heart in conflict with itself”--Faulkner “fiction is the art form of human yearning”—Robert Olen Butler. Conflict Crisis Resolution. Trouble is your business.

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Structure

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  1. Structure Story form

  2. The basics of any story • “two dogs fighting over a bone”--Kazan • “the human heart in conflict with itself”--Faulkner • “fiction is the art form of human yearning”—Robert Olen Butler • Conflict • Crisis • Resolution

  3. Trouble is your business • *Trouble is interesting; happy is boring . • *Passive characters are difficult to do well:

  4. Passive characters The fiction of finger-pointing • . . . In such fiction, people and events are often accused of turning the protagonist into the type of person the protagonist is, usually an unhappy person. That’s the whole story. When blame has been assigned, the story is over”—Charles Baxter • *Avoid “blame” or “finger-pointing” stories.

  5. Your Character Must want Something . . . • “Fewer people have cause to panic at the approach of a man with a gun than at the approach of Mama with a curling iron. More passion is destroyed at the breakfast table than in a time warp.”---Burroway • . . . But it doesn’t • Have to be something • Stupendous.

  6. Every story has an arc • Get your characters fighting. • Have something-the stake-worth their fighting over. • Have the fight dive into a series of battles with the last battle in the series the biggest and most dangerous of all. • Have a walking away from the fight. • But . . . It doesn’t have to be a physical fight with fists. It can involve words, thoughts, sly actions, etc.

  7. The Parts of the arc Climax—the moment when the protagonist gets or fails to get what he/she wants. Often changes or fails to change. Falling action—afterward Resolution—final outcome • Exposition— • Setting, basic info • Rising Action—the protagonists faces increasingly difficult challenges.

  8. Inverted Checkmark

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