Practical Writing / Story Telling 01

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Protagonist: The main character in a story. This does not necessarily mean the one whose name appears the most, it means the one whose story is told, the one whose aim is defined, whose actions drive the story, and who ultimately fails or succeeds in his aim at the conclusion of the story.

Antagonist: The character who tries to hinder the protagonist from achieving his or her aim.

Plot: Sequence of events, in other words, the things that happen in a story. In a classical story, the plot is usually instigated or provoked by the protagonist.

Sub-Plot: A sequence of events that happen parallel to the main plot. In a classical structure, the sub plot should either aid or hinder the Protagonist in achieving his/her goal.

Plot twist: A point in a story when things suddenly move in an unexpected direction, adding to the tension and suspense.

Sequence: A series of events in a plot which hang together and are connected, with a beginning, middle and an end or conclusion. For example, lets say you are writing a police detective story, about a detective hunting a criminal. You could have a Sequence where the detective discovers that a guy named Nino who lives in China Town might know where he can find his suspect. The detective then tries to find Nino and extract the information from him. The sequence would start off with someone telling him that he needs to talk to Nino. The detective seeks Nino. He finds him but Nino runs away. The detective chases and catches him. Nino refuses to talk, maybe he hates cops, he is loyal or scared, you know the drill. The detective threatens and maybe beats Nino up (the American way). Finally Nino talks, and tells him all he knows. The detective is now closer to finding his suspect. He says bye to Nino, gives him some money or knocks him out. This is the end of the sequence. The story moves on to the next sequence.

Acts: Distinct parts of a plot. Usually, a classical story is divided into three acts, which serve distinct dramatical purposes. Act 1, also called The Beginning, is about the first quarter of a story, Act 2 , The Middle, is about two quarters of the story in length and is in the middle of the story obviously. Act 3, the end is the last quarter of the story.

Don't worry too much about these terms yet, we will deal with them later.

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AnonymousAnonymousover 13 years ago
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thanks for the information I was looking for somthing on writing,

and found yours cheers

AnonymousAnonymousabout 17 years ago
Good effort on your breath but..

...don't waste your time and energy. Those so-called new writers would hardly give this a glance. Why? cos they are just too eager to submit their stories to consider all those pointers you dish-out. And lately those so-called new writers certainly has an attitude with the capital 'A'. Reminded me so much of those rejects from the 'American Idols' who couldn't hold a tune right but insisted they were good and the judges were bias, awful, judgmental etc.etc.

AnonymousAnonymousabout 17 years ago
Great Article

This beats all the 'how to' books written on erotic story telling. Hope that all hopeful writers read this piece.

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