Help for Students!!! How to Write a Short Story
How To Write a Short Story
In my class, a "short story" is anything that is prose (that is to say, not poetry) and tells a made-up, or fictional, story. "Short" can mean anywhere from about a page and a half for fifth graders all the way up to ten or twelve pages, or even more, for eighth graders. When students ask me how long a story needs to be, I always say, "As long as it takes to do a good job."
Before you begin
To do a good job, a story must do these things:
- have an interesting main character that the reader cares about
- have a clearly-described setting
- show the main character solving--or trying to solve--a problem.
How to do it
The Characters
The Setting
A few well-placed details of setting can really set the mood. If the first scene opens in the dead of night with rain pounding against the
Don't ignore setting. It can help your story.
The Main Problem
In class, we try to have big problems grow out of the details we have developed for our main characters. If our character wants to play professional football, what would be a good main problem for a story? Any number of things:
- His girlfriend--the love of his life--will leave him if he continues to play football
- He gets in an accident and has to fight his way back to playing condition
- He gets in an accident and must learn to adjust to
life without football - Congress passes a law prohibiting football
- In order to liven up the
game , the NFL replaces the ball with a bomb set to explode at some randomly-determined time.
If the main character you've developed is deathly afraid of spiders, what could your story be about?
- Her house is invaded by millions of spiders
- The only job she can find is as the spider keeper at the zoo
- She finds herself slowly transforming into a spider
- She crash-lands in the jungle and must live among the !Lwana tribesmen of the Amazon basin, for whom enormous spiders are a staple food
You get the idea. Big problems for stories are easy to come by. A good story is about an interesting character facing--and trying to solve--a big problem.
Other Tips for Story-Writing Success
- Unless you're writing a fairy tale, do not begin a story with the words, "Once upon a time" or its evil twins "One day," "One dark night," or anything similar.
- You should also avoid, "Hi, my name is..."
- Do use a lot of dialogue. People talk a lot, so characters in stories should, too. It brings stories to life. Just remember to make a new paragraph every time you switch speakers.
- Get a good mixture of dialogue and narration, so the reader can visualize the setting, what the characters are doing, and so on.
- Try beginning a story with either dialogue or action.
- Don't be afraid to rewrite. If it's not great, fix it.
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