Struggling with Plot Bronwen Griffiths
Some novels are more plot-driven than others – compare, for
example, The Dry by Jane Harper with a book like Virginia Woolf’s The Waves. Your novel does not have to
be plot-driven, nor do you have to feel that digression is something to avoid. Personally,
I love reading asides, or delving deep into the head of a character through a
long, internal monologue. I can get enjoyment from reading about the landscape,
or learning about a character’s hobby, or being taken on a philosophical
journey, and even a plot-driven thriller needs its quiet times -- otherwise the
reader can feel dizzy – as if they are on an endless merry-go-round.
But whatever genre you write in –
plot matters. If you don’t think about plot carefully before setting down to
write your novel, or you make too many plot changes half-way through the
writing, you can feel as if you are stuck in a maze with no sign of a way out. Plot
doesn’t have to be linear. You can use flashbacks, or tell a tale from back to
front, but it does at least have to make sense.
Unless you
are writing a ‘whodunit’ in the Agatha Christie vein, most plots are character
driven (and to be frank, even in a ‘whodunit’ character matters). The main
consideration for the writer is why,
when and how. You must ask yourself some serious questions about each
character. Why is she running away? Why now and not tomorrow or next week or
last year? Or, why is this character, rarely impulsive, now behaving with
reckless abandon? What has propelled him to take this action?
You must also
consider consequences. What are the consequences of this character running
away, both for the character herself, but also for the plot? Will someone come
looking for the runaway or not, and if not, why not? You have to keep asking
these questions in order to come to the end, the conclusion of the book.
Plot also has to be believable. This is the ‘how’ of the plot. We’ve all watched films or TV series where a set of coincidences or a series of clumsy plot devices leaves us rushing for the off-switch. Or something doesn’t make sense. That’s not to say you can’t write coincidences -- I’m sure we can all think of some quite extraordinary coincidences in our own lives -- but you must examine them under a microscope. Are they believable? Can you take the reader with you?
Plot also has to be believable. This is the ‘how’ of the plot. We’ve all watched films or TV series where a set of coincidences or a series of clumsy plot devices leaves us rushing for the off-switch. Or something doesn’t make sense. That’s not to say you can’t write coincidences -- I’m sure we can all think of some quite extraordinary coincidences in our own lives -- but you must examine them under a microscope. Are they believable? Can you take the reader with you?
The writer
must beware the dreaded ‘plot-hole’. These can be even more dangerous than the
pot-holes in our increasingly poor roads. Plot-holes can be inconsistencies in
location or character that can’t be explained, or questions not answered in the
initial premise of the novel, or one scene not being connected to another.
Googling ‘plot-holes’ brings up dozens of examples. Who killed the chauffeur in
The Big Sleep? The book provides no
clue, and when William Faulkner and his team encountered this problem in
writing the script for the film version of the novel, they called Raymond
Chandler to ask him. Chandler’s response
was, ‘Damned if I know.’
Plotting your
novel doesn’t have to result in boredom for you, the writer. Your characters can still
surprise you along the way, and, as I said in the first paragraph, there is
nothing wrong with taking a meander. But if you make big changes half-way
through, or you are unsure of some aspects, you will run into trouble. I know.
I’ve done it. Doing it means an awful lot of re-writing. You may, of course,
decide half-way through that you’ve made a mistake and want to change what
happens. That’s your prerogative as a writer. Perhaps half-way through you’ve
found a better way. Just be aware that a re-write which involves changing the
plot requires a great deal of work.
If you are
lucky enough to be offered a publishing deal you will probably be asked to do a
structural edit. This involves looking at
the 'big picture' elements of the narrative and characters, and examining which
of these elements are working and which could be improved, cut or changed
altogether. It won’t just include the plot but also the setting, pacing,
character development, narrative style, voice and tense. But if you’ve you
already examined the plot for inconsistencies and plot-holes you are already
almost there.
Not
Here, Not Us – stories of Syria, 2016
and A Bird in the House, 2014.
Her flash fiction has been widely
published.
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