Sunday, September 11, 2022

Publishing Series: #3 More on Outlining

You have your idea.

No matter how well you think you know your story, some type of outlining is a must. I know -- Stephen King swears he does not use an outline, but face it. We're not Stephen King. If the hero's journey won't work for you, look for another style of outline. There are tons of them out there.
A writer friend of mine, Martin Wilsey, uses the following one. I like it and referred to it -- although I don't think I used it faithfully -- in my first two novels.

1. Fill in the blanks:  When [INCITING INCIDENT OCCURS], a [SPECIFIC PROTAGONIST] must [OBJECTIVE], or else [STAKES].

2. Write a paragraph describing each part:
   a. The Setup
   b. Rising Action
   c. The Resolution

3. Now break down the 3 parts by bulleting points under each of the acts below.
The Setup: (Start with your paragraph from above)
    Act 1 - The Setup
    Act 2 - Something Bad Happens
    Act 3 - The Protagonist/Antagonist Identified
The Rising Action: (Start with your paragraph from above)
    Act 4 - The Push - The Door to Act 5 (It's a one-way door, no turning back)
    Act 5 - Go for the wrong goal
    Act 6 - Reversal - It is the low point, reveals the Achilles heel of the nemesis
Resolution: (Start with your paragraph from above)
    Act 7 - Go for New Goal - The clock is ticking - protagonist has a new plan.
     Act 8 - Wrap it Up, New goal is achieved.
     Act 9 - The denouement. Closure. The End.

I personally love Act 4 and 5 -- the no turning back and going for the wrong goal. It adds much needed tension to a story line.

Just remember, whatever outline model you choose, there is no reason to follow it faithfully. If you closely examine any of the Harry Potter stories, it is clear J.K. Rowling used the Hero's Journey outline, but there are events that are rearranged or missing. That's okay. As long as it works in the end!

Next Up: The First Draft



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