Writing Matters


As you can imagine, I read all sorts of different stories on the Fiction Team.

Some have me hooked from the first page. Others take a while to get going, but the storyline gathers momentum and finishes on a high. And sadly, some simply don’t make the grade at all.

So what makes a good Friend story?

Characterisation And Plot

As with all stories, it’s about characters and plot. The aim is to create a sympathetic character which the reader can relate to, and then give your character a goal or goals to achieve. A lot of stories I read feature protagonists with less than desirable traits, which makes me not care about them or their story journey. A character doesn’t have to go on a Jason and the Golden Fleece style quest to make it memorable. But the character should have obstacles to overcome in order to push the story forward.

Ain’t No Mountain High Enough

You can create the most colourful characters with the wittiest of dialogue, but you need to put them in positions where they are “tested”. It could be a plot about a woman looking for love. It sounds pleasant enough, but this alone doesn’t constitute a good story. However, if you throw in a series of catastrophic dates before your heroine meets Mr Right, then your character would have had to “work” in order to reach her goal.

Log Lines

A simple exercise to highlight what your story is about is to use the log line challenge. This is a one-sentence summary of your story, defining who the main character is and her motivation to succeed.

Log lines are used a lot in relation to film scripts, but they can be applied to any story plot. Here’s an example: a girl finds herself transported to a magical land, and through a series of adventures she has to search for a way back home to Kansas. Any guesses to what it is?

It can be quite a challenge to sum up your story in one line, but it’s an exercise which highlights the basics of good storytelling.

Enjoy your writing journeys.

Read more writing tools here 

Alan Spink

I am a member of the “Friend” Fiction Team. I enjoy working closely with writers and being part of the creative process, which sees storytelling ideas come to fruition. A keen reader, I also write fiction and enjoy watching football and movies in my spare time. My one tip to new writers is “write from your imagination”.

Writing Matters

As you can imagine, I read all sorts of different stories on the Fiction Team.

Some have me hooked from the first page. Others take a while to get going, but the storyline gathers momentum and finishes on a high. And sadly, some simply don’t make the grade at all.

So what makes a good Friend story?

Characterisation And Plot

As with all stories, it’s about characters and plot. The aim is to create a sympathetic character which the reader can relate to, and then give your character a goal or goals to achieve. A lot of stories I read feature protagonists with less than desirable traits, which makes me not care about them or their story journey. A character doesn’t have to go on a Jason and the Golden Fleece style quest to make it memorable. But the character should have obstacles to overcome in order to push the story forward.

Ain’t No Mountain High Enough

You can create the most colourful characters with the wittiest of dialogue, but you need to put them in positions where they are “tested”. It could be a plot about a woman looking for love. It sounds pleasant enough, but this alone doesn’t constitute a good story. However, if you throw in a series of catastrophic dates before your heroine meets Mr Right, then your character would have had to “work” in order to reach her goal.

Log Lines

A simple exercise to highlight what your story is about is to use the log line challenge. This is a one-sentence summary of your story, defining who the main character is and her motivation to succeed.

Log lines are used a lot in relation to film scripts, but they can be applied to any story plot. Here’s an example: a girl finds herself transported to a magical land, and through a series of adventures she has to search for a way back home to Kansas. Any guesses to what it is?

It can be quite a challenge to sum up your story in one line, but it’s an exercise which highlights the basics of good storytelling.

Enjoy your writing journeys.

Read more writing tools here 

RELATED READS

Tablet with 'Update' written on it; cup of tea; and Post-it notes. Submissions

Fiction Desk Catch-Up

Writer Of The Week: Hazel Meredith-Lloyd Writer of the Week

Writer Of The Week: Hazel Meredith-Lloyd

The letters Q and A suspended in speech bubbles with a digital feel to the illustration. Writing

Digital Publishing Q&A

Writer Of The Week: Ruth Barnett Writer of the Week

Writer Of The Week: Ruth Barnett