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Seven Step Plan for Short Story Writing

By Melanie Marten, published Jan 11, 2007
Published Content: 907  Total Views: 1,461,086  Favorited By: 160 CPs
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Rating: 4.4 of 5
Many people think that writing a short story should be pretty easy. After all, its only about two to four thousand words that they have to get down on the page. But, when they sit down to actually write the thing, they may discover something. Writing a short story is not as easy as it sounds.

There are two main problems people run into when writing a short story. One is not putting enough into it, and the other is putting too much in. With this easy seven-step plan for short story writing, you should be able to turn out great short stories in no time.

Step One: Theme

The theme is basically a one-sentence description of what your story is about. It's not the plot, or story line, or the short story, but the meaning behind it. Possible themes for short stories include: good triumphs over evil, true love will never die, or even liars can prosper.

Step Two: Setting

The setting of your short story answers the questions where, and when. In a short story, where less detail is required, this can be pretty general. Possible settings include: Paris in 1890, a suburban neighborhood in 1980, or the trunk of a car at night.

Step Three: Characters

You should limit yourself to two or three main characters in a short story. After all, you only have a limited amount of words to describe what happens to them. Do a basic character sketch of each one so you know what makes him or her tick.

Step Four: Conflict

Conflict is the guts of any short story. You have to make your character have some sort of problem. Without conflict, there is no dramatic tension, and your short story ends up being boring. Possible conflicts could be: stood up by a date for the prom, capture by a man with a gun, or something as innocuous as lack of rain.

Step Five: More Conflict

After you introduce the conflict, people don't want it to be solved right away. You should make your short story even more exciting by adding conflict atop more conflict. So, Betty Sue was stood up for the prom. Well, what if it is because her date was murdered and now she's a suspect?

Step Six: The Change

Takeaways
  • The theme is basically a one-sentence description of what your story is about.
  • The setting of your short story answers the questions where, and when.
  • You should limit yourself to two or three main characters in a short story.
Comments
Comments 1 - 5 of 5
 
 
Sorry you didn't like it Jay.

Posted on 10/27/2008 at 3:10:17 PM

 
Not very good.

Posted on 10/27/2008 at 7:10:58 AM

 
very pleasant these is good for the students

Posted on 07/22/2007 at 4:07:00 AM

 
Ha ha! Well, they still gotta have talent! :)

Posted on 01/12/2007 at 8:01:00 AM

 
Easy to follow instructions! You could be flooding the market with new writers at this rate!

Posted on 01/12/2007 at 7:01:00 AM

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