Lisa Cron authored a writing book titled "Wired for Story. This details the mental reaction from your prose. She delves into what stimulates the reader and motivates that person to become a fan. One brilliant aspect of this deals with what the topic of this thread is about.
There are three questions which need to be proffered and answered by your beginning.
Whose story is it?
What's happening here?
What's at stake?
Cron goes on to explain Stanley Fish, a literary theorist, published an article in the New York Times which addressed those three questions.
He was headed to board a plane for a trans-continental flight when he realized he had nothing to read. Darting over to the magazine stand with bare minutes left, he decided he would use the first sentence to be the arbiter of which book he bought. Not the cover. Not the back cover blurb. The first sentence.
The winner - Elizabeth George's "What Came Before He Shot Her."
"Joel Campbell, eleven years old at the time, began his descent into murder with a bus ride."
As Cron continues:
Whose story is it? Joel Campbell
What's happening here? He is riding a bus, which somehow leads to a murder.
What's at stake? Joel's life, someone else's life and maybe more.
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Beyond this, I ask you one question.
Who is YOUR reader?
This is not a description of your reader. Nothing like five feet four, blue eyes, educated.
The premise here is what drives your reader to read the specific kinds of books you write? And do you write the kinds of books people will read?
Now to be fair, I must tell you I will insult some of you here with this theory. You see what this theory implies is writing is a small business. It has nothing to do with what you read, but what the reader of your work reads. What are the triggers in your prose that convert your reader from being a casual bystander to a fanatic about your books. One who waits in the cold for your next epic to hit the stands. Or has some kind of alert when Amazon uploads you. The type of reader who tells her friends about your books, but will not lend them her's because, "This one is mine. Get your own."
In this theory, story and plot are not the same. The story is the motivating factor behind the plot, which makes your MC who she is.
"Harry Potter" and "The Silence of the Lambs" are the same story. I'll allow that to stew for a moment as your brain either rejects me completely, or wants to know more.
The book of Silence and the film are remarkably the same. Harris was masterful at crafting his story, and it came out on the screen without much editorial adjustments by the producer/director or the writer.
Now think on the beginning. Clarice Starling is running the obstacle course. She is sweaty, running in a light rain. It is surely fall where she is - Quantico, Va - and she is training alone. Alone! Then a man tells her Crawford wants to see her. She wanders through the complex, passing PT - physical training - classes and instructional classes. She ends up in an elevator where she is standing in front of four or five men, all over 6 feet tall. They are clean cut, wearing clean clothes and she is dwarfed by them in her sweats.
She is alone, in a world mostly dominated by big men. Alone!
It isn't much longer that we find out Clarice Starling is an orphan. Fact is Hannibal Lecter is an orphan. And as you have put together now, Harry Potter is an orphan.
And what is the inner motivation of orphans? To assimilate with family. Through magic Harry gets his family back at the end of the series. Hannibal and Clarice end up being a dysfunctional family, but they connect.
Your reader can be an orphan. Not in the sense they had no parents. But perhaps a relationship with parents that was strained. Or they didn't get the love they wanted from their parents, or parent. So the motivation of the reader is to connect with family in the deepest recesses of their subconscious.
Knowing this, do you fill that desire of the reader? Because there are many desires which drive us all, and all encompasses readers.
Now here is the insult. If you write stories that would please you, the kind you would read, you are missing the point of being a small business owner. Many times I have spouted this and had people tell me they write for themselves. I have no issue with that position. I am merely expounding on the terrain where we currently find ourselves.
But there is something the big time speculative fiction writers do, either deliberately or instinctively that connects with their readers. Because, if you look at S. King, J Patterson, J. Grisham, J. Evanovich, ad infinitum, ad nauseum, you will note they all write at about a sixth grade level.
What this means is they keep their prose simple and accessible. A sixth grader could read the book, but there is a good chance they would not understand some of the adult themes.
The author who perhaps is the best at this time in servicing the desires of the reader is James Patterson. He worked on Madison Ave. as a Mad Man. He understands the 30 second commercial, and can fashion this type of writing to meet the requirements of his readers emotionally. But, to be sure, they all do this. Nicholas Sparks is masterful at this. And yet he isn't what you'd call a master story-teller.
Now drop the notion you are writing art and focus on the commercial aspects of writing. This theory puts a real twist in how you write. If you write for the reader, then you are most likely not writing something which is your métier. However, once you accept this idea and begin to fashion stories which reach the reader, they become your story too. That is the dichotomy of this thesis.
Romance has a footprint where the reader is looking to rejoin a lost love, or a love they never had. Notice there is usually a page where the man realizes he cannot live without her and will sacrifice everything to be with her. This is the money shot for the reader.
Mystery/crime fills a need for a reader whose requisite is to make logic out of chaos. It was Professor Plumb, in the Library, with the Cuisinart.
Oddly enough, the conventional detective story has little character arc, as does thrillers. Jack Reacher nor James Bond never changes who they are, or has an epiphany. Bond simply beds the next hot girl and has a martini, stirred not shaken. Reacher buys new clothes and disappears.
To sum up, before there is "Once upon a time" there should be some serious thought toward who is your reader. If you are going to be so deliberate as to write the first sentence, first page, first chapter, or place a hook at the end of each chapter, then this is a logical step. It is a part of fashioning your book, your story.
If you are writing what pleases you, and think this is a load of manure, enjoy. People need hobbies.
I was inspired by the thread theme to share this. It may be gold, it may be crapola. You decide.
But regardless if it is one or the other, finish. Finish. Finish. The End may be the two most important words in your opus.
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