• Café Life is the Colony's main hangout, watering hole and meeting point.

    This is a place where you'll meet and make writing friends, and indulge in stratospherically-elevated wit or barometrically low humour.

    Some Colonists pop in religiously every day before or after work. Others we see here less regularly, but all are equally welcome. Two important grounds rules…

    • Don't give offence
    • Don't take offence

    We now allow political discussion, but strongly suggest it takes place in the Steam Room, which is a private sub-forum within Café Life. It’s only accessible to Full Members.

    You can dismiss this notice by clicking the "x" box

TYM's new blog-why a story doesnt work

Invest in You. Get Full Membership now.
"We spend two hours watching him get buffeted about by the waves, but never taking the wheel of the ship."

This is a great analogy for a protagonist with no agency which is so common in newbie writers. The first novel I wrote (never to be published) had a main character with very little agency. But I learnt and hopefully won't do that anymore.
 
"We spend two hours watching him get buffeted about by the waves, but never taking the wheel of the ship."

This is a great analogy for a protagonist with no agency which is so common in newbie writers. The first novel I wrote (never to be published) had a main character with very little agency. But I learnt and hopefully won't do that anymore.
As has been pointed out many, many times, Indiana Jones has no agency in the first of the films with that name. Remove his character from the plot and the story ends in exactly the same way. and yet...
I think Pete has nailed this notion. The only rule for writing is that if it works, it works.
Huck is an observer, after all. Dent is along for the ride. Mu'ad Dib spends hundreds of pages being buffeted by the world around him. In the Lake of Woods is spectacular, but no one ever even figures out if the ship has a wheel.We recently read Wolff. Was there a ship, were there waves?
 
Remove his character from the plot and the story ends in exactly the same way.

You could argue that the germans would never have found the ark if its wasn't for Indiana Jones. He was the only one smart/lucky enough to find its true hiding place.

Anyway, and maybe I misunderstand "agency" here, but Mr. Jones has a very clear goal which he actively pursues. Okay, he fails, but he still had a lot of agency in the story.
 
You could argue that the germans would never have found the ark if its wasn't for Indiana Jones. He was the only one smart/lucky enough to find its true hiding place.

Anyway, and maybe I misunderstand "agency" here, but Mr. Jones has a very clear goal which he actively pursues. Okay, he fails, but he still had a lot of agency in the story.
And he'd originally (pre-film) abandoned the woman in pursuit of his career. But saving her life became ultimately more important than the ark.

(And it was Harrison Ford . . . )
 
Invest in You. Get Full Membership now.
And he'd originally (pre-film) abandoned the woman in pursuit of his career. But saving her life became ultimately more important than the ark.

(And it was Harrison Ford . . . )
If we assume that the ultimate story was to create as many Harrison Ford closeups as possible, and this is a pretty decent idea, then he had a massive impact on the narrative arc.
 
If we assume that the ultimate story was to create as many Harrison Ford closeups as possible, and this is a pretty decent idea, then he had a massive impact on the narrative arc.
Shocked Harrison Ford GIF
 
Sherlock Holmes. There's a character with a flat arc (this being about storytelling and not maths). What makes the books/films great is a clever plotline (so entertaining that we forgive plotholes along the way) and Sherlock's idiosyncratic charisma.
 

Further Articles from the Author Platform

Latest Articles By Litopians

  • People Like Those: Aigneis
    Aigneis is a diminutive lady in her 80s, still sharp of mind, though frail of limb. She moved to Bir ...
  • Where it all started
    When Alphonse de Lamartine said “music is the literature of the heart,” I’m pretty sure he was ...
  • If Genre Were A Custody Battle
    A conference room. Two GENRES sit fuming on opposite sides of a table. The DIRECTOR sits at the head ...
  • A few of my favourite things
    I like skidding along a slippery floor in just my socks. And sending my shopping cart spinning on it ...
  • Don’t Just Take My Word For It
     ‘The only thing worth writing about is the human heart in conflict with itself’ – William Fa ...
  • Second-Hand Love Letters – Part Three
    Knowing my fondness for such things, one of my dealers (vinyl not drug) found this for me inside a c ...
  • Theme
    A theme in literature is the central idea or underlying message that a story communicates. While the ...
What Goes Around
Comes Around!
Back
Top