One thing that is interesting me at the moment is structure and it is fascinating to see how the writers sending in stories to the Global Short Story Competition the address the problem.
Many of you go for the traditional idea of a beginning, middle and an end told in simple narrative form but a significant number opt for flashback.
Both are effective although flashback does carry the gamble with it that you know what happens at the end of the story. Nevertheless, flashback can work very well. Just look at the Colombo television detective show to see how knowing the end does not ruin the enjoyment of the rest of the story.
A number of you opt for diary entries, taking the story day by day. I think this is a terrific way to do it because it gives your story a natural structure right from the off.
Diaries were hugely popular as a fictional tool in the 19th and 20th Centuries and had started to die off a little before Bridget Jones returned the genre to mass appeal in the Nineties.
I think that another reason why diaries are so popular is the Net and the way writers are increasingly using the structure and language of blogs and emails to tell their stories.
Of course, one drawback with diaries is you can only tell the story from one viewpoint so cannot switch to other scenes, other people etc. But in the short story, the single viewpoint approach can work brilliantly.
* You can enter the October competition at www.inscribemedia.co.uk
John Dean.
No comments:
Post a Comment