Whether you outline in advance or write on the fly, plotting a novel is hard work. Using examples, I’ll show you how to improve your novel’s plot structure by highlighting personal relationships, defining the protagonist’s goals, adding a midpoint reversal, and creating narrative questions with interesting answers. Understanding common developmental issues can help you avoid them before they occur or diagnose problems in manuscripts you’ve already written.
You can read a text version of this video on Medium: [ Ссылка ]
Love my channel? Treat me to a cup of coffee at [ Ссылка ].
Behind-the-scenes notes for this video: [ Ссылка ]
Twitter: [ Ссылка ]
Title and End Music: “Clockwork” by Vindsvept - [ Ссылка ]
Background Music by Vindsvept:
+ “Hearthfire”
+ “Woodland Lullaby”
+ “Voyage to Nowhere”
+ “Wildkin Glade”
+ “Over the Mountain”
+ “The Fae”
+ “Leaving the Dream”
SOURCES
Janice Hardy’s Blog: [ Ссылка ]
Writer’s Edit analysis of “The Hunger Games”: [ Ссылка ]
Plotting Pitfalls (0:00)
1. Lack of Personal Stakes (0:52)
2. Unfocused Trajectory (4:55)
3. Slow Middle (10:23)
4. Unsatisfying Payoffs (17:25)
Plot Grows From Character (24:55)
4 Plotting Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them
Теги
writing motivationhow to writefictionliteraturestorystorytellingcreative writinghow to plotplottingmidpoint reversalslow middlethree-act structurenarrativenovelnovel writingbooksbooktubeauthortubeDiane CallahanQuotidian WriterwriternovelistUnwindNeal ShustermanEmma DonoghueThe Two Princesses of BamarreGail Carson LevineC.S. Lewisplot breakdownwriting analysiswriting inspirationplotting a storyplotting a novel