There are many different types of stories and styles
to write them—but each may be described as consisting of the unified sequence
of events having a beginning, middle and an ending. This is known as story form
or a story’s structure.
Classic
Plot Structure:
- Story beginning—establishes a main character and a basic situation.
- Story middle—develops a problem or difficulty and builds to a climax, which is then resolved.
- Story ending—concludes the story’s events, leaving the reader satisfied.
Now briefly consider the three elements common to
storytelling and help build the story's structure.
Characters—It’s
important to make your characters life-like. Whether they are human or animal,
they are the lifeblood of your story. Main characters need to have more detail and
a background/history.
Setting—Denotes
a story’s timeline and place. A setting may be merely a backdrop, such as a
home, school or park. Another kind of setting is the action setting that either
creates or is directly related to the story’s conflict, like the storm in “The
Wizard of Oz.”
Theme—This
is the point of the story. It’s important not to have your story be devoid of
ethical or moral content. By adding this element, you will have a more
satisfying story and some degree of healthy growth or change in the main
character—about themselves, others, his world, and perhaps about the larger
world beyond.
Please note: Young readers
do not want to feel a moral is being taught while reading. The primary purpose
of a story is to entertain…not point to an explicit moral. Let me say this
again another way…stories entertain while hiding the moral being taught to the
young readers.
When working on Setting and your story form a common term you’ll hear is the “Rule of 3”. This
means your main character must go through three challenges (each one bigger
than the first) before resolving the problem/conflict. This helps build climax
and keeps the pacing of the story engaging for young readers.
Note a good story’s form will seem natural and
organic to the reader. The opening paragraph leads logically into the second
and then third; the middle, climax and resolution all seem part of the natural
flow. Nothing feels added in as an afterthought or just there for the mere
purpose of detail.
Many factors may determine the climax and resolution
of your story from a lucky chance to a surprising turn of events. No matter the
problem (which can take form as an urgent conflict, puzzle, question or
challenge) the plot structure is the strongest and most compelling when it
generates suspense for the reader.
It’s important to remember that the main character
resolves the problem and must go through some type effort—a crucial action or
decision that constitutes the story’s climax before the problem is resolved.
Master this classical story style first and
then you can apply its lesson to other kinds of stories.
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Writing Prompt:
Use the list of 20 words below that have no obvious relationship to one another or pick your own words and throw them into a hat/bowl. Choose up to 5 words and try and working them into a story for young readers;
or you may choose a single word as an idea-starter, letting it suggest other
words and concepts via the process called “clustering”.
Be
creative and have fun!
Brainstorming
Words:
Whisper Flag Patch Leap
Candle Slide Cup Sing
Brush Float Park Fell
Bark Sky Warm Flip
Pancakes Bag Crack Rainbow
1 comment:
What is Story Form?
This is now so clear to me! Thank you Virginia Grenier for your explanations.
(Dorothy Purge)
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