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Creative Writing

Cwfictionplot1011 rev

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Creative Writing

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A plot is a series of events deliberately arranged so as to reveal their dramatic, thematic, and emotional significance.

-Janet Burroway

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The Big Ideas

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We all know classic story descriptions. Boy meets girl. Boy loses girl. Boy gets girl. Stories have a beginning, middle, and end. Cinderella can’t go. She goes anyway.

Cinderella gets Prince.

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See Classic Plot Structures worksheet.

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What did you notice about what’s required before you begin any story?

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Character(s) Basic plot idea (beginning, middle, and end),

including a conflict

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Break your story idea down into three sentences of three words each.

That will give you a beginning, middle, and end to help you understand the foundation of your story.

By having to choose three verbs, you’ll be forcing yourself to consider three important parts of the action.

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Developing Plot

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What happens once you have the basics?

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Characters and Plot are closely related.

Get a character in your head. Get to know him/her/it.

Place said character in a situation and see what happens.

Ask yourself What if? START TO ASK QUESTIONS.

Decide what the character will do in that situation.

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Chalene had a fight with her mom. How would she react?

“Top-ten-of-his-class” Joe dropped out of college to become a mechanic. How would his parents react?

Todd got a girl pregnant.

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Stuck?

Ask yourself What if?

Come up with five ways to continue the story.

Choose the best one, the one that feels natural.

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Imagine that you’ve started a story…Paul, a young boy, shoplifts with his

cousin. The story opens when they take something more expensive than they have ever taken before. This raises the stakes immediately.

After writing 2.5 pages, you get stuck.

Ask yourself what if, and come up with five answers to the question.

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Paul decides to admit to shoplifting, but hopes not to implicate his cousin.

Paul is excited by shoplifting something more expensive, and talks his cousin into going back again soon.

The store security guard notices their theft and decides to set a trap.

Paul feels brave now and steals something from his stepfather--something Paul has wanted for a long time.

There is a time shift to five years later when Paul commits a major burglary.

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Remember, all good characters want something.

Think about what your character might do in order to fulfill his/her desires.

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Consider the obstacles your main character will encounter.

These drive plot, too.

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A story without a conflict is boring.

Problems drive stories.

Try magnifying the problem, the tension and shrillness, even to the point of absurdity or hyberbole.

Add stress, between characters and within characters.

Why?

I want you to see the need for tension, but I also want you to know what can happen when there is too much.

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Exaggerate this conflict.

John and Sue are next door neighbors. Their parents have known each other for years, and they’ve known each other since they were born. They’re juniors in high school, and they decide to start dating. She gets pregnant.

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You have ten index cards in front of you.

On the first five, list labels associated with what they do (jobs, activities, etc.)

On the second five cards, list a mildly strange or unusual behavior. These do not have to be associated with the labels on the other cards. In fact, it would be better if they were not.

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Shuffle each pack of cards SEPERATELY. Now, ask “Why did Card A do Card B?”“Why did the fashion model pick up the

paper on the driveway?”Continue to flip cards until you find a

question that’s worth answering. There are many possible pairings. Reshuffle if necessary.

The event suggested by the machine may work best at the beginning of the story, but think of what would happen if you placed it at the end or in the middle.

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You have the final decision on any story you write.

As peers and teachers, our job is to react and guide you as a writer.