The Key to it All in One Question
By Karen McCullough
As an author, plotting has always been my biggest
problem. I’m a pantser who tends to start a project with some idea who the
characters are, a pretty clear picture of how the story gets underway, and some
vague notion of how it should all come out. That’s about it. Beyond that I tend
to wing it.
And inevitably at some point I get bogged down and have
to take a break to figure out what to do next. And that’s where things start
getting hairy. I make lists, consider options, and try to figure out what my
hero and/or heroine would do in the situations they’re on.
Obviously they’ve got problems. It wouldn’t be much of a
story if they didn’t. And just as obviously, they have to try to figure out how
to handle the issues they’re facing. Usually I’ve got several options and I’m
trying to puzzle out which of those would be the best way to go with my story.
Then someone told me the secret. She gave one great piece
of advice that has helped me make sense of plotting and character development
issues.
She said to figure out the one thing your character would
never do and then create a situation where they’re forced to do just that. You
build your plot backwards from that one piece of information. Somewhere early
in the story you have to let the readers know what that one thing is. Every
decision you, the author, make along the path of the book leads to that moment
when the character has to decide to do the thing they least want to do.
It forces you to build in both serious conflict and
significant character development, because obviously it’s going to take
something serious and desperate to make your heroine do something she’s always
said (to herself at least) she would never do.
Good examples from movies include Indiana Jones and the
snakes, Luke Skywalker turning off his lightsaber during the climactic battle
with Darth Vader at the end of Return of
the Jedi, Dorothy confronting the witch in The Wizard of Oz, etc. I’m sure you can think of many more examples
if you try since it’s such a fundamental piece of storytelling.
Remember how near the beginning of Casablanca, Ricks says, “I stick my neck out for nobody.”? And then
of course, in the end, he does just that, giving up everything, including the
woman he loves dearly, for a higher cause, by allowing her to escape with her
husband.
The higher the stakes, the greater the potential loss,
the more difficult the decision is for the character, the more powerful and
gut-wrenching the story becomes.
I tried to do this in my mystery novel with romantic
elements, A Gift for Murder. The
heroine, Heather, has a job she loves as assistant to the director of the
market center. Her main role is being the troubleshooter during shows and
exhibits, and she’s good at it. But when
a murder occurs and Heather begins to sniff out the motives for it, she’s
forced to risk more and more to get to the bottom of it and see justice done.
Initially it’s just the irritation of the people she works with, including her
boss, threatening her, but as the show moves on and time gets short, she’s
warned that she’ll lose her job if she doesn’t stop asking probing questions.
She’s forced to ask herself if finding the answer is worth losing her job and
the decision isn’t an easy one. And in the end she has to risk even more…
A Gift for Murder
For
fifty-one weeks of the year, Heather McNeil loves her job as assistant to the
director of the Washington DC Market Show Center. But the Gift and Home trade
show, the biggest show of the year at the center, is a week-long nightmare.
This year’s version is worse than usual. Misplaced shipments, feuding
exhibitors, and malfunctioning popcorn machines are all in a day’s work.
Finding the body of a murdered executive dumped in a trash bin during the show
isn’t. The discovery tips Heather’s life
into havoc.
The
police have reason to suspect the victim’s wife killed him, but Heather doesn’t
believe it. She’s gotten glimmers of an entirely different scenario and
possible motive, but questioning exhibitors about the crime doesn’t make her
popular with them or with her employers. Still, other lives might be at risk,
and if she doesn’t identify the murderer before the show ends, the culprit
could well remain free to kill again.
Her
only help comes from a company executive with ulterior motives and the Market
Center’s attractive new security officer, Scott Brandon. Despite opposition
from some of the exhibitors, her employers, and the police, Heather seeks to
expose the killer before the show ends.
To solve the mystery she will have to risk what’s most important to her
and be prepared to fight for answers, her job, and possibly her life.
- Kindle:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00CGKYNT6
- Nook:
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/gift-for-murder-karen-mccullough/1100204419?ean=2940016665269&isbn=2940016665269
- Smashwords:
https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/308556
- iTunes:
https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/a-gift-for-murder/id641857648?mt=11
- Kobo:
http://www.kobobooks.com/ebook/A-Gift-for-Murder/book-5L2aq9_WEkWGv_Jz7hBgzQ/page1.html?s=h5XtGABwv0WxX_DLMA81fw&r=1
Karen McCullough
Karen
McCullough is the author of more than a dozen published novels in the mystery,
romantic suspense, and fantasy genres and has won numerous awards, including an
Eppie Award for fantasy. She’s also been a four-time Eppie finalist, and a
finalist in the Prism, Dream Realm, Rising Star, Lories, Scarlett Letter, and
Vixen Awards contests. Her short fiction has appeared in several anthologies
and numerous small press publications in the fantasy, science fiction, and
romance genres. She has three children, three grandchildren and lives in
Greensboro, NC, with her husband of many years.
Author’s
links:
Website:
http://www.kmccullough.com
Twitter:
https://twitter.com/kgmccullough
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DeleteWhat an extremely cool way to approach conflict creation! Thanks!
Delete( By the way, it took me 3 tries to get that comment up without any typos or other mistakes. Sorry about that!)
ReplyDeleteThanks for the advice, Karen. I've found myself stuck many times when writing a story. I love the premise of your book. It sounds great.
ReplyDeleteThe best piece of advice I ever had came from Mary Balogh. I asked her how to get out of the sticky middle and she said "make it worse." That has helped be so many times!!!
ReplyDeleteWriting backward from the ending is great advice! So helpful with those pesky middles:)
ReplyDelete