Ahhh,
the satisfaction of progress. No, I am
still not writing the story but I have made progress in the planning
stage. I dabbled some in character biographies
and deciding on themes and symbolism, but today we will discuss plotting the…plot.
I
said in the previous post that I plan to follow a basic three act
structure. This is not some special
revelation created by me. The three act
structure for story telling has been around for a very long time and most of
the writing research websites I referenced recommends it.
I will also have a short prologue and
epilogue. Does every story need a prologue
and epilogue? I do not think so. I do
think my story needs them however. There
are a few introductory elements that I think do not fit on my act 1 and there
are a few closing events that do not fit in act 3. They are very short so they will not require
their own acts. I guess they will take about
a chapter each.
After
deciding on my basic structure, I needed to fill out each act and decide which
plot events will go where. It sounds
easy, but it was actually a pain in the nether region. I knew the basic premise pretty well, I had a
firm grasp on the characters, I knew the important events, and I knew where I
wanted the characters to end up. It
should have been easy to put that all together.
It was not easy. I started to
notice blank space. I wanted the character
to start here with this event then end up at this place with that event. Between the two events…well…blank space. Part of the issue involved gaps in the main
plot. Not plot holes per se, but rather
a lack of natural plot progression. The
other part of the problem involved dead time for characters even when the main
plot was progressing. Also, none of it
fit cleanly into a 3 act structure. This
was going to be a problem.
It
was a little frustrating but it was also kind of fun. It was just a problem that had to be
evaluated and worked through. It is this
kind of problem solving that attracted me to the practice of law. I tabled the problem for most of yesterday
and did not picked it all back up around 8:00 last night. I re-reviewed my research on plot structure
and exactly what each act should generally consist of:
Act
1 introduces the main characters, introduces the world, and introduces whatever
problems the main character faces.
Act
2 increases the pressure on the character. It solves some problems but the
characters are faced with new problems – bigger problems. The main plot devise, or question, or conflict
builds.
Act
3 is the climax. Everything should point
to the final peak of the main plot. If
this were an action movie, this is where you would see the biggest explosions. If this were a romance movie, this is where
the guy tries that last-ditch crazy thing in the hopes of winning the girl.
A
little simplistic? Sure, but it nails the big ideas. You also need mini events,
smaller peaks and valleys through each act to keep the reader going and you
need strong transitions between the acts.
Please note that I am not taking credit for the above breakdown. It came from my research (see my research
post).
After
re-reviewing my research I was still having trouble visualizing everything and what
should go where. I look large poster
size sticky sheets (I cannot for the life of me remember what they are called)
and placed 5 on the wall. I labeled them Prologue, Act 1, Act 2, Act 3, and
Epilogue. I then started writing down
each major plot point and each major scene I could think of. I placed them in the sheet where I thought
they fit best. I made a note for each
event that impacted the theme and symbolism of the story and I wrote down
questions that I wanted to reader to ask throughout each act. It was a bit of a mess and very much out of
order. Everything was color-coded so
that helped.
That
is when I noticed there was a huge balance issue between act 1 and 2. The way I organized the events, there was a
lot to cover in act 2 and act 1 was a little bare. It left me trying to fill voids in act 1. I moved some things over and created a much
better transition between the acts. I
then re-wrote everything in a word document in an outline format and in
order. It looked good. It flowed naturally (for the most part), and
felt balanced.
I
is still not perfect and I am sure things will change as I work through them
but I feel like I have a map to follow now, and when you are traveling through
new territory having a map feels really good.