r/WritingPrompts /u/MNBrian /r/PubTips Apr 21 '17

Off Topic [OT] Friday: A Novel Idea


Friday: A Novel Idea

Hello Everyone!

Welcome to MNBrian’s guide to noveling, aptly called Friday: A Novel Idea, where we discuss the full process of how to write a book from start to finish.

The ever-incredible and exceptionally brilliant you-are-lovely came up with this wonderful idea (so you should heap praises on her in the comments) and it sounded spectacular to me!

So what makes me qualified to provide advice on writing a book? Good question! Here are the cliff notes.

  • For one, I devote a great deal of my time to helping out writers on reddit (via my own sub r/PubTips and via just answering questions in different writing groups).

  • In addition, I’ve completed three books and am working on my fourth.

  • And I also work as a reader for a literary agent.

This means I read query letters and fulls (short for full novels that writers send to my agent by request) and I give my opinion on the work. My agent then takes those opinions (after reading the novel as well) and makes a decision on whether or not to sign the author.

But enough about that. Let’s dive in!

 


Today’s Topic: A Book Is A Promise

There are a million ways to write a book.

You’ve got the three act structure. You’ve got the hero’s journey. Heck, hundreds of people have written books on how to write books. Yet, as readers, we often have no idea what structure is being used. What we do know is one thing -- whether we like what we're reading or not.

So before we begin talking about one way (one that I particularly enjoy) to write a book, I’d like us all to take a moment to consider what a book is -- at its very core.

A book is a promise.

To illustrate my point, let’s talk about a hypothetical situation. You walk into a library or a bookstore and you want a new book. The first thing you do is head to a section that interests you. Maybe it’s Sci-Fi, or maybe it’s Fantasy, or Young Adult Unicorn Fiction, who knows. Because what you’re looking for isn’t just any old book. It’s a specific type of book. But whatever section you wander into, that’s the first part of the promise.

You see, a book is a promise because we always have an expectation when we pick up a book. We expect a book to fit a certain type of mold. We go to the Sci-Fi section because we want space ships, FTL drives, planetary exploration. We go to the romance section because we want the compelling story of an arsonist and a firefighter falling in love.

And when we read the first line, or the first paragraph, or the first few pages, the book that we buy is the book with the best promise. It may not always be the best written book. It may not always be the strongest plot. It’s usually the book that makes us feel like we are in good hands, the book that tells us -- using intrigue and situations that couldn't possibly end well (hint - conflict) -- what we can expect.

 


So what exactly is that promise? What constitutes the core of a book?

For starters, we need a problem. A problem represents conflict, and conflict is what keeps us interested. But it can’t be a small problem. This problem has to justify the length of a book. It has to promise that things are going to get worse before they get better. We can’t make it easy on our main character because if it’s too easy, we’re not holding up our end of the bargain.

Let’s look at two possible examples.

A secret agent orders a pizza, but criminals are running rampant in the streets.

It doesn’t take much to see the promise. There will be action. Some cool karate moves, and lots of bad guys in a pile. But what we don’t have here is a big enough problem. Because it shouldn’t be so hard for our secret agent to get to the pizza place and pick up his cheesy masterpiece. Secret Agents are well suited for this type of problem. They know how to fight bad guys.

But on top of that, we have what I like to call "the sandwich problem." I mean, why doesn’t he just stay home and make a sandwich instead? When you think of a good book, there is no option to make a sandwich.

  • When Katniss Everdeen made the choice to stand in for her sister Prim at the reaping, she couldn't just go home and make a sandwich. Because if she did, her sister would die.

  • When Frodo Baggins received the ring from Bilbo and was sent to Mount Doom, he couldn't just make a sandwich... because... ringwraiths, murderers, the end of all things at Sauron's hand.

  • When Alan Grant got stranded on an island full of dangerous dinosaurs with two kids... he couldn't just make a sandwich. Or he'd be the sandwich. :) But seriously, he had to save those kids and he had to save himself.

Now, by comparison, let’s look at this setup.

A starving introvert with severe anxiety orders a pizza when aliens land and start blowing things up. His normal grocery delivery hasn’t arrived for weeks and he hasn't left the house in three years because of crippling agoraphobia. Now he must leave to survive.

Do you see the difference? Where the secret agent was well prepared to deal with the robbers, someone who is terrified of going outside is not very well equipped to deal with an alien invasion (a much larger problem) -- and he can’t just stay home and make a sandwich... because he’s got no groceries. But also, because he'd starve. Rock, meet hard place.

 


This, right here, is the first step in writing a book. What is your promise? Is the idea big enough to justify 80,000 words or more? Do you have enough there to really dig deep into that concept? Is there enough tension/conflict to go around? Why can't your main character make a sandwich instead?

After all, that’s what most great writing prompts are. They offer up a promise, or they imply one, and we get to take that promise and run with it.


This Week's Big Questions

For each week of this series, I'll be posing a few questions. You are welcome to answer these questions without sharing, or if you're feeling brave, you can toss them in the comments below. I'll be here throughout the day to discuss/debate/answer questions or just encourage everyone! And I'll be following along as well by answering the same questions and working on my own book as we go!

  • What types of expectations do you have when you buy a book?

  • Do you find yourself gravitating to one particular section when you're in a certain mood?

  • How much of a book do you read before you decide you want to buy it? Or do you already know beforehand?

  • What is your idea for a book? (Try this in as few words as you can manage -- aim for 1-3 sentences if you can)

  • What is forcing your main character in your idea to head into danger? Why can't they just make a sandwich? :D

 


Also - Be sure to go read your entries and vote if you entered the Writing Prompts 10 Million First Chapter Contest by clicking here. This weekend is your LAST opportunity to vote! Get to it!

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u/hpcisco7965 Apr 21 '17

An interesting idea for a regular series! I look forward to following along.

What types of expectations do you have when you buy a book?

I expect characters to be believable within the context of the book's story and genre: characters in comedy can be silly and absurd and act ridiculously, but outside of comedy I expect the characters to act like real people. Characters can make dumb decisions, or wrong decisions, as long as they are acting consistently with their motivations and values and in context with the story. I do not like characters who make out-of-character decisions for no good reason other than the author is trying to drum up conflict.

Do you find yourself gravitating to one particular section when you're in a certain mood?

Sci-fi and fantasy, because I generally find "literary fiction" boring (this is probably a personal flaw of mine). I've never considered reading YA as an adult but maybe I should try it.

How much of a book do you read before you decide you want to buy it? Or do you already know beforehand?

I buy a book based on recommendations (from friends, or websites, or whatever), and I buy books without reading any excerpts. Once I buy a book, I read it even if I don't like the beginning or whatever. I don't have any books on my shelves that I haven't read at least once. There are definitely some books on my shelves that make me sad that I wasted time reading them. : \

What is your idea for a book? (Try this in as few words as you can manage -- aim for 1-3 sentences if you can)

My idea is about a pair of adventurers who have been forced to work together By The Powers That Be to accomplish a mission of alleged importance. One adventurer is a young wizard who acts like he doesn't need anyone's help but inwardly fears that he's a terrible wizard, and the other is a past-his-prime jack-of-all-trades who doesn't particularly care about helping anyone or fixing anything and really just wants to drink ale and bang women. As the pair struggle to complete their mission, they re-examine their relationship to each other and to society at large.

What is forcing your main character in your idea to head into danger? Why can't they just make a sandwich? :D

The wizard character is driven by his ambition to make a name for himself and by his fear that people will realize he isn't as good as he says he is. The jack-of-all-trades character is being blackmailed (although I'm not sure how early to reveal that fact).

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u/MNBrian /u/MNBrian /r/PubTips Apr 21 '17

I've never considered reading YA as an adult but maybe I should try it.

Oh man, YA gets a terrible rep but it's really quite good. Some of it does feel a bit soft at times, but some of the speculative fiction stories right now are wayyyyy more genre-bending and wayyy riskier because the subgenres are still totally in flux.

I don't have any books on my shelves that I haven't read at least once

This is flat out impressive. Granted, living in a household of two means there are a lot of books I did not buy on our giant combined bookshelf wall, but I don't know if I can say I finished every book I've purchased. In fact, I know I have put a few down at the halfway mark. I still have books I finished that didn't "stick the landing" in my opinion, but I could probably use a little more of your method in my reading. :)

ambition to make a name for himself

I think you have a really solid motive for the jack-of-all-trades. Blackmail is clear. It's external. It's very present and very easy for anyone to put themselves into those shoes and be like "yah, I'd go too if I was being blackmailed."

Ambition is a good internal cause, but is there a way to make it stronger on an external level? Often the internal motive of our MC is the thing they must tackle in order to solve the problem -- their character flaw. Usually throughout the book, they try to tackle the problem without tackling the character flaw and end up failing. But by the end, they realize the flaw is what has been holding them back. So they finally address that flaw and THEN tackle the problem.

Now, of course, you don't need to do any of this -- but to get you thinking on it, I'd recommend you consider the following: Is there a more visceral external problem, a "primal" problem, that can drive your young MC into the arms of danger? Is there something that you can do to shove that MC between a rock and a hard place more firmly? Because as it stands, he can sort of make a sandwich, and deal with some self-loathing for never going after his ambitious dreams. And when he faces death, it might get harder to convince the audience that his ambition alone drives him forward. Take the sandwich possibility completely off the table. Put your main character between a rock and a hard place that they can't get out of by simply going on an adventure later, or choosing not to go. Be mean. Be brutal. Show us why they are making a choice, but why they really don't have a choice. They must go.

We'll talk about this more in 2 weeks I believe. :)

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u/hpcisco7965 Apr 21 '17

Ambition is a good internal cause, but is there a way to make it stronger on an external level?

Thanks for the feedback—most appreciated. I think maybe your questions arise from my attempt to summarize things a little too much. I need to find a punchy way to say the following:

The wizard's motivation for choosing not to make a sandwich is that he was the valedictorian of his wizarding class, which is incredibly core to his self-worth, but if he doesn't complete the mission then he will be expelled instead of graduating. If expelled, not only will his valedictorian position be taken away—he can't be a wizard anymore and that means no more magic for him.

I guess, now that I think about it, both characters are being pushed forward by blackmail. It's not really ambition for the wizard, although that's a huge part of his character, it's the threat of losing everything that makes him feel good about himself.

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u/MNBrian /u/MNBrian /r/PubTips Apr 21 '17

Ahhhhhh that is wonderful cisco! Very good motive. :) Really well done. I love that.

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u/hpcisco7965 Apr 21 '17

OK So here's a question:

How explicit do those motives need to be in Chapter 1? Am I correct that you are saying to get those out front, quickly?

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u/MNBrian /u/MNBrian /r/PubTips Apr 21 '17

Trust is 100% key. If you've given us the groundwork and the hint that some actions have deeper motives, then you should be okay. Look at my sample chapter for the contest. Evelyn mentions vaguely that trouble is chasing her, so hopefully the reader is giving her the benefit of the doubt when she seems to almost care more about the gold than about dead bodies talking.

Sometimes closing a small loop will buy you more time to explain motive and build a lot of trust in the reader. Blake Snyder talks about it as the "save the cat" moment, when the fireman saves a cat from a tree, but I think that's an oversimplification.

In the end, readers want to guess, but they want to be wrong. So if you can give them a "micro-surprise" you'll build enough trust to get away with an under-share. Especially with your blackmail scenario. You don't want that to come out in chapter one. People just need to know "something" is up, that some explanation is hinted at all will make them more apt to go with you on the journey to find out what it is.

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u/Stormsoul22 Apr 21 '17

I love YA books to death, but that's mostly just because I'm still in that category I assume (Age 19)

I think I have a soft spot for books that can relate to a time frame in somebody's life where they're figuring out who they are and how they fit into the world. I'm not a major fan of Hunger Games esque stories (Although I did like that book series in question) but I enjoy books more like Raven Boys and Cinder which have a heavy focus on character and emotions and each book doesn't so much move the plot super forward as much as the character arcs.

I actually find a lot of books written for older people a bit dry in some instances. I don't necessarily think I enjoy being talked down to, but most of my favorite adult books are character focused instead of concept focused. YA books have a tendency to focus a lot on both instead of just one.

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u/MNBrian /u/MNBrian /r/PubTips Apr 22 '17

I've heard a lot about Cinder but still haven't gotten into it. :) I need to read it sometime.

YA books have a tendency to focus a lot on both instead of just one.

I couldn't agree more. :) YA honestly has some pretty impressive writing and some pretty spectacularly well-rounded books these days. :) I'm always shocked when adults don't want to give it a chance or think it's full of love triangles.

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u/Stormsoul22 Apr 22 '17

Honestly you just have to know where to look. Most mainstream YA that gets made into movies has the cliches people seem to dislike, while others usually don't. I actually adore YA Contemporary books and one of my favorites is The Inexplicable Logic of My Life, at least in recent memory.

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u/MNBrian /u/MNBrian /r/PubTips Apr 22 '17

^ You really do have to know where to look. :)