STEPS
TO WRITE AN INTERESTING STORY
Writing a short
story or novel is one of the best ways to let your creativity run wild! To make
your own story, all you'll need is something to write with and a bit of
inspiration. Here are special ways to create your own stories.
1. Create the cast of characters you want for your story.
You'll
want a main character or characters, people with whom they are friends and with
whom they are enemies. If there is a main antagonist (often considered a bad
guy) come with them too.
Authors
find that actually planning the entire story, though it may take months, is
beneficial to creating a smooth, connected story. Developing your characters is
important, and conveying them correctly in your work is even more so.
2. Use actions and plots in the progress of your
story
When
writing, don't tell your readers everything you planned abruptly (although the
occasional telling is fine). Instead, show them. The readers can figure out
your characters' personalities better when they observe the characters' to
reactions to different situations.
3. Choose a setting, or time and place, where your
story will take place.
Try
to come up with a setting that the reader can find believable, and one that
makes sense, even if it's a fantastical setting, it should have elements that
ground it in reality. Try to make it sound like a place that someone would want
to read about. Make up your own town or state if you want.
4. People watch
Spend
time in public places, surreptitiously watching people and making up stories
for them. Write down descriptions of their appearance, their mannerisms, their
voices, what they were saying and what they were doing. Then take those stories
and make them longer and more intricate.
Put
people that you see into the same story, even if they aren't interacting in
real life.
5. Talk to strangers.
Obviously
be safe while doing this, but talk to random people. Get insights into their
lives and what they're doing. Even a simple discussion about the weather can
give you insight into a person. Do they mumble? Do they meet your eye or do
they look anywhere but you? How is their body language?
Using
what you've observed, write a story about them, using the mannerisms and
descriptions that you've noticed about them.
6. Read nonfiction.
The
best stories do seem to come from real life events and experiences (as they say
"Truth is stranger than fiction") so read lots of nonfiction, especially
if you're a fiction writer. Read histories of all different countries and time
periods and build stories based on the things that happen. Read science books
and medical books. Read about seafarers, and potential witches.
Pick
out the facts and things that most interest you and build stories based on
them. For instance, you could take something as simple as a decommissioned
lighthouse in Maine and turn it into an epic tale of good and evil.
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