How To Plot A Novel Like A Well-Timed Mechanical Ambush - Steemit

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The key takeaways are to write an effective logline that summarizes the story in one sentence, map out the major plot points using the three-act structure, and let the characters guide the story once writing begins.

The steps to writing an effective logline are to boil down the entire narrative to one sentence focusing on the protagonist, goal, and opposing force. The sentence should sell the story without using character names.

The guidelines for an effective logline are to use character types instead of names, clearly present the protagonist's goal, describe the antagonist/opposing force, make it clear the protagonist is proactive, detail the stakes, and sell the story.

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last month by green-majik 25 in writing

Step One

So you want to tell a tale. What do you do? Just sit down and start writing it from the
beginning? Do you even know where to begin?

Well, the first step is a “simple” requirement…or so it would seem.

Your task, O Jedi Scribe, is to write one stinking sentence.

That’s it. One sentence. Now to create that sentence, you’re going to have to boil the
entire narrative essence of your Epic Tale down to one sentence which focuses on the
line of action and the character (or characters). When you achieve the objective, you
will know exact what it is you are writing and why. They say the hardest thing about
writing is knowing what to write. Your finished sentence will brilliantly distill what
it is you are writing.

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Write a paragraph or pages of notes attacking your idea from every angle. Then take
that raw material and slash it down to one perfectly worded sentence. Make mind
maps if that helps you “see” your material.

But when you are done, you will have a sentence that tells your story. If you’ve ever
read TV Guide descriptions of what a show is about, this is exactly what you are
attempting to do. In Hollywood, this is called the logline. In fact, this is exactly what
you are doing here – writing a logline that tells the story of your novel.

Now here’s a set of guidelines that are even more specific to the task.

1. Your sentence must focus on a protagonist, the goal, and the antagonist or
antagonistic force opposing the protagonist.

2. Don’t use character names in your sentence; use character types: a cop, a hooker, a
rocket scientist. Add a good adjective to add some depth to the character: a burned-
out hooker.

3. Clearly present the protagonist(s) goal.

4. Describe the antagonist or antagonist force which opposes the hero.

5. Make it clear that the protagonist(s) are pro-active to the action, not reactive.

6. Detail the stakes or ticking time bomb that the characters are working to achieve or
beat.

7. Don’t just tell your story with your logline, sell it as well. When you write the perfect
logline of your novel, you’ll have the best thing to tell people when they find out
you’re a writer. Everyone always asks: “What’s your story about?” That’s when you
rattle off your logline.

So now we just need a good example of all of the above in action. Here’s my logline
for Special Task Force: GREEN MAJIK #1 “Pretty Hate Machine” now available at
www.bluefalconpress.com:

“A maverick detective, a Gonzo journalist, and a has-been porn star fight to expose
the federal government’s involvement in the worst schoolyard shooting in history
while a super-secret strike unit infiltrates the center of the cyclone, the factory
where little girls are turned into suicide juggernauts and unleashed.”

Are we on the same sheet of music now? Is it as clear as the water in a Caribbean
lagoon? This is Step One in writing a great genre novel. In the next lesson, I’m going
to show you how to diagram all the important turning points in your story and
structure your idea inside the 3-Act Paradigm or what needs to be in the Beginning,

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what to do with the Middle (a lot of writers get bogged down here and I will show you
how to stay out of the mud) and how to wrap it all up with a satisfying End.

Stay tuned.

Welcome to Step Two in the Blue Falcon Press plot planning process.

What I’m about to reveal here is something professional screenwriter’s already know
backwards and forwards. This diagram was originally brought to the world by the
late, great Syd Field. Now here is something novelists need to internalize: this
schematic works Jim Dandy as a template for your novel as well as a screenplay. I’ve
written EVERY novel of mine using the Paradigm above to map out the major
movements and turning points in my plots. EVERY. ONE. This diagram keeps you on
target, keeps you focused, and keeps you from writing crap that has no business being
in your story.

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The first thing to do in figuring out your paradigm is write a sentence which describes
how the story is going to END. Then do the same thing for the BEGINNING. In my
novels, the beginning is always the INCITING INCIDENT. It is the event that starts
all the other story dominoes falling. In Pretty Hate Machine, this is the Sadie
Hawkins attack on her school. Next, decide what PP1, PP2, and MP are. Let me
explain what a Plot Point is. A plot point is defined as any incident, episode or event
that “hooks” into the action and spins it around into another direction. (from Syd
Field’s SCREENWRITER’S WORKBOOK) Now notice where your plot points fall: at
the end of Act 1 and at the end of Act 2.

The Mid Point is some kind of incident, episode, or event that occurs in the middle of
ACT 2 and breaks ACT 2 into two halves of dramatic action. Act 2 becomes two
halves joined together by the Mid-Point. The first half of Act 2 now has a target you
know – the Mid-Point.. The second half of Act 2 has another target to write towards,
everything that happens after the Mid-Point and concludes with Plot Point 2.

Let’s illustrate how this works by examining the Peter Jackson remake of King Kong.
I’m not using Pretty Hate Machine to illustrate this because it will ruin the wonderful
surprise for readers of the book. I’m not going to spoil that surprise for you. In King
Kong, Act 1 ends with Plot Point 1 which in this case is when the expedition reaches
Skull Island. The Mid-Point of the story is when King Kong shows up for the first

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time, taking the girl into the jungle with him. So, the first half of Act 2 shows all the
incidents that take place exploring the Island. The second half of Act 2 details the
girl’s relationship with Kong and her shipmates attempts to find her and rescue her.
Plot Point 2 is when Kong is captured and the ship leaves for New York. See how that
works? It makes Act 2 absolutely manageable now. No reason to fear Act 2 anymore.

Let’s discuss briefly the purpose each act serves. Act 1 is known as the Set-Up. It
shows your character’s in their normal world before the real meat of the tale kicks in.
Plot Point 1 is really where the steam of the story picks up and spins us into The
Confrontation which occupies the entire length of Act 2. Act 2 is where you put your
heroes in a tree and throw rocks at them. Act 2 ends with Plot Point 2 which spins the
story around into another direction, which is the straight down nose dive into The
Resolution or Act 3. This is where your heroes regain the initiative and turn the tables
on the opposition, smacking them down smartly. Or if you’re into tragedies and such,
this is where the heroes are defeated by the opposition. I don’t like those kind of
endings so I don’t use them. I believe the good guys will always best the bad guys.
That’s how I roll.

Next, impose the length restrictions of the screenplay on your novel. In a screenplay,
Act 1 is one-forth the length of your script. For a 90 minute show, that’s roughly 22
and a half pages. Act 2 is half the length of the script or 45 pages. Act 3 is the same
length as Act 1. In a novel, you do this by dividing your word count by 4. GREEN
MAJIK novels are 100,000 words in length. So Act 1 and 3 are roughly 25,000 words
in length; Act 2 is 50,000 words, which is divided into two chunks of 25K by the Mid-
Point. Simple Simon.

Here’s your homework assignment. 1st, get Syd Field’s book The Screenwriter’s
Workbook. It’ll be the best $16 you’ll ever spend. Next, read Pretty Hate Machine and
tell me what Plot Point 1 and 2 are and what the Mid-Point is. Email your answers to
[email protected]. Once you know what you are looking at, these events are
easy to spot.

Next, we will talk about planning the most important part of your novel: your
characters. See you there.

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Characters. The heart and soul of good fiction. Character decisions and actions
should dictate plot development, not the other way around.

The first thing I do with a character is visualize that character. The best way to do this
is find a representative picture of your character. I pick a movie or TV personality to
represent the character. Once I can “see” a character, “hearing” the character is easy
for me.

I use Randy Ingermanson’s Snowflake Method


(http://www.advancedfictionwriting.com/articles/snowflake-method/) to get my
character skeletons fleshed out on paper rather than following Syd Fields character
creation process. Both are very similar. I’ve found Randy’s process to get to the core
of a character essence instantly.

The first step is to write a one-page dossier which deals with 7 key points:

Name

Ambition (what the character wants abstractly)

Story Goal (what the character wants concretely)

Conflict (what prevents the character from reaching the goal)

Epiphany (what the character learns, how the character changes)

A One Sentence Summary (think of this as the character’s logline)

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A One Paragraph Summary (expand the logline to one paragraph)

Now, let’s do this for a character. This is what my dossier on Special Agent Mallory
Hammond looks like for the forthcoming GREEN MAJIK adventure, Splatterpunk.
You are getting a sneak preview into Mallory’s continuing story line in the next novel.
Hope it makes you want to read the first one now.

Agent Hammond’s ambition in #2 is the same as it was in #1: To expose the


underground cult she knows is operating all over the world.

Her story goal is to hold the alligator farm long enough to get one of the fry
specimens out for her squid expert to examine.

The source of Mallory’s conflict in this tale is the FBI hierarchy, Homeland Security
and the mysterious Men In Black from MAJESTIC.

Mallory’s epiphany in this adventure is that the cult she is pursuing has infiltrated
the government at all levels.

The One Sentence Summary: Mallory Hammond finds her investigation under
literal siege when Homeland Security arrives to take over and silence her with
national security.

The One Paragraph Summary: When DHS shows up being led by a MIB and
attempts to seize the investigation by force, Hammond uses the Hostage Rescue Team
like infantry to form a blockade and temporarily put the aggression into a stand-off
while she gets one of the fry specimen prepped for smuggling out in an ice cooler
brought by the boys to house the PBR in. She has Fender send her state police as
escorts to ensure they get out without being ambushed by black ops. She goes to see
the squid expert Fender has located. She takes the fry specimen to Dr. Donovon West
of Miskatonic University located in Arkham, Massachusetts.

There are two more steps in the Snowflake Method to fully flesh out the character. I
do the next step fully and the final step partially.

Take your paragraph summary of your character’s story line and write a full page,
page and a half treatment which tells the entire story arc of the character inside your
novel.

This is what the treatment looks like:

Special Agent Mallory Hammond receives an urgent phone call from BRAD
FENDER. The shit has hit the fan. The Director is under siege from Homeland over
her little monster hunt. Homeland is en route to her location, whatever she has to do

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to get the evidence out she better do now. Hammond hangs up on him and starts
deploying the HRT to hold a line and prevent the invaders from getting access to the
farm house. She enlists Ronson and Gage to assist her in snagging one of the
specimens. It is a harrowing experience getting that damn squid out of the tank and
into a small shipping crate filled with sea water. When the three emerge back
outside lugging the shipping crate, the rest of the HRT are blockading the Homeland
Security convoy. The black Suburbans are filled with MIB agents. The squid gets
stowed in the trunk of Hammond’s GSA sedan. Then she goes to the skirmish line
and meets the MIB in charge: MR. ADAMA. A terse exchange. The MIBs back out of
the drive to allow Hammond and the HRT to exfil. Hammond goes directly to the
airfield. At the airfield, she gets on a commercial flight with the squid to fly directly
to Arkham, Massachusetts.

The campus of MISKATONIC UNIVERSITY. Fender is blowing up her phone again.


She was suppose to fly back to D.C.! Prior to the balloon going up, Fender had found
her squid expert, one DR. DONOVAN WEST of the Miskatonic Oceanographic
Institute. She tells him he’s just going to have to hunt her down and hangs up. Then
she drops her FBI issued smart phone into a fish tank and proceeds to turn Dr.
West’s conceptual universe upside down. Dr. West has been in touch and go
negotiations with a producer from Animal Planet for a reality TV series featuring
his expedition to find a live giant squid in the wild. After seeing the squid fry and
hearing Hammond’s tale about what was found in Louisiana – his TV series idea
takes a quantum leap. He rudely excuses himself to call the producer – get the hell
out here with cameras now! When the cameras burst onto the scene, her first
instinct is to punch aqua danger boy’s lights out. Dr. West is something of an orator
and quickly points out the insulating advantages she might have transferring her
investigation from the FBI to Animal Planet and his reality TV show. And, yeah,
Mallory Hammond sees the advantages immediately as well.

A cultist hit team tries to take back the avatar. Mallory Hammond engages in a
blistering gun battle and foot chase with the hit team, flanked by a daredevil Animal
Planet cameraman. The intense footage is aired immediately along with the earlier
taped testimony of Hammond’s detailing how the squid fry was taken into custody.
Now the FBI witch hunt to drum Hammond out of the bureau has hit a sensational
snag – the TV series is an instant mass phenomenon. Mallory Hammond is now the
bureau’s biggest PR asset.

The final step is to create a full blown character biography detailing all the usual stuff:
name, rank, serial number, hair color, ethnic heritage, birth day, birth place, schools,

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all that down in the weeds detail. I don’t get wrapped around the axle about the
character biography. When I have everything I’ve just revealed, I know everything I
need to know to start writing.

In other words, I now know what to write.

For the sake of covering all the bases, use this link (https://drive.google.com
/open?id=0BxA1mVe3Sc_tSzlmaUZuX1UzUWc) to download a character biography
template from me.

The next installment is going to wrap up this discussion of all my secret plotting
methods. See you there.

Here we are in the final stretch. Once you’ve done all your character work, you’ve got
a lot of story synopses that tell the whole story from each character’s piece of the
story. Now we roll it up into one blueprint, the 4-page treatment.

First, take you logline in step one and expand that into a paragraph made up of 5 and
ONLY 5 sentences.

1. Sentence one should cover your BEGINNING or the Inciting Incident as I refer to it.

2. Sentence two will cover Act 1 to the first Plot Point.

3. Sentence three covers Act 2 to the Mid-Point.

4. Sentence four covers Act 2 after the Mid-Point to the second Plot Point.

5. Sentence five covers Act 3, your climax.

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Next, take your paragraph of five sentences and expand that into a clean one-page
treatment. Expand your five sentences into five separate paragraphs. Each paragraph
will describe exactly the same territory as each sentence did above. Therefore:

Paragraph one covers the BEGINNING.

Paragraph two fleshes out Act 1 to PP1.

Paragraph three details Act 2 to the Mid-Point.

Paragraph four covers the rest of Act 2 up to PP2.

Paragraph five will detail Act 3 completely to the END.

What comes next is what Syd Field calls the “kick in the ass” assignment: the four
page treatment. Note that this procedure is pretty much the same in both the
Snowflake Method and in Syd Fields’ Screenwriter’s Workbook. Here’s how we break
it out:

Page one will cover all of Act 1.

Page two will cover Act 2 up to the Mid-Point.

Page three covers the second half of Act 2.

Page four covers all of Act 3.

Notice that we’ve written this four page treatment according to the same space
requirements we’ve described in step 2 by dividing your total word count into 4 equal
chunks. Act 1 and 3 occupy one-fourth of the total length of the story and Act 2 is one
half of the total. Work on this until you have a perfect four page treatment. Single
space or double space? I single space it to get more info per page and can fit in all the
character story lines into the final document.

The Snowflake Method gives you two extra steps in that you write up a complete
scene list chapter by chapter and Syd Field does the same thing but uses index cards
to make the scene list, one card for each scene.

I don’t do the scene lists. Once I have a tight four page treatment, I stop planning
there and start the actual writing of the novel. For me, the four page treatment is all I
need. At this point, I know EXACTLY what I’m writing. So I start writing.

Here’s why I don’t do scene lists: once I start writing, the characters will come to life
and will ALWAYS take over the story with stuff you could have never seen coming in
the planning stage. This is where the magic happens. In fact, what actually happens in
Pretty Hate Machine is a perfect example. What happens in the novel as it reads today

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IS NOT what I thought was going to happen from the Mid-point on. What happens in
the novel is solely the result of the characters taking over and showing me a much
better series of events than I could have ever cooked up at the macro level of
planning. It’s that great surprise I’ve eluded to but haven’t ruined with a spoiler. The
first thing to go out the window for me is that scene list. It always changes for me
once the characters take over driving the bus. So why waste time writing something
that’s almost always going to change? The four page treatment is all the blueprint I
need to start writing confidently.

Give your characters the freedom to come to life. Otherwise, you will run the risk of
turning the characters into marionettes that are just moving around the story because
the plot says they have to do this, whether they want to do that or not. Let them live,
O Jedi Scribe!

They say there are two kinds of novelists: planners and pantsers (flying by the seat of
your pants). Pantsers just start writing with little or no prior planning, thinking that
by just writing, at some point, the characters will reveal the plot and the story will
write itself. For the beginner, this is dangerous. You will probably write a lot of junk
that has no business being in the story and you could end up in a dead end – not
knowing what the hell to do next. I’m three-quarters planner and one quarter pantser.
I only let the pantser come into play AFTER I know exactly what it is I’m writing,
knowing in advance what the targets are I’m moving towards.

Only write scenes that either move the story forward or reveal something essential
about character or necessary exposition like backstory. If the material doesn’t do one
of those two things, CUT IT OUT. Ruthlessly. I don’t care how much you like it. If
you’re not moving the story relentlessly forward, then it doesn’t belong. We’re not
literary writers. We’re genre writers which means, ultimately, we’re writing to be
read, by as many readers as we can attract.

The formula I’ve revealed here will work for ANY genre tale you want to tell. It’s not
just for action-horror novels like I write. It works for any story that follows the eternal
hardwired blueprint we call the 3-Act Structure. Deviate from this timeless structure
at your own risk.

We’re done here. I hope you’ve gotten something out of this. Now go write your Great
American Genre Novel. And when you do, let me know how this has worked out for
you. I’d like to know.

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