About five years ago, I discovered John Truby's story structure. A student of mine at UCLA was going on and on about what a genius he was, so I bought the tapes of his classes, bought his book--and had my first New York Times Bestseller. Along the way, I became fast friends with his wife, the novelist and screenwriter, Leslie Lehr, and attended John's classes as well.
John and Leslie approach story differently from all the other story people. There's no three-act structure. There's no rising and falling action. Instead, the Truby method goes much deeper, focusing on the moral choices of the characters and the impacts of those choices on everyone. His first book, The Anatomy of Story: 22 Steps to Becoming a Master Storyteller is a bestseller--and I have my own dog-eared copy on my desk at all times. Usually focused on films, John and Leslie are now having an upcoming class, STORY FOR NOVELISTS, starting in San Francisco, September 2015 and I cannot wait until they bring it to New York.
Over the past 25 years, more than 30,000 people (including me!) have attended John's sold-out Writers' Studio seminars around the world. He's been a story consultant for major studios and a script doctor on more than 1800 movies, sitcoms and television dramas from Sony Pictures, HBO, Paramount, BBC, and more.
Leslie Lehr writes about what-ifs of modern motherhood. Her debut novel, 66 Laps, won the Pirates Alley Faulkner Society Gold Medal. Soon after, her screenplay, Heartless, was produced as an independent film. The romantic thriller financed five other films for Santa Monica Pictures, aired on USA TV and has been screening in Europe for eight years. Her next books were the nonfiction tomes, The Happy Helpful Grandma Guide, excerpted on FisherPrice.com; and Wendy Bellissimo: Nesting, featured on Oprah.
Her second novel, Wife Goes On, was a featured selection for the Pulpwood Queens Book clubs, with 250 chapters of tiara-wearing, book-sharing readers. She next wrote the screenplay, Club Divorce, for Lifetime. What a Mother Knows, her literary thriller is a Recommended Read at Target and is currently in development for film. In addition to private manuscript consulting, she teaches at the world-renowned Writer's Program at UCLA Extension and mentors writers to publication as the Novel Consultant for Truby’s Writers Studio.
I'm so completely thrilled to have both John and Leslie here. Both of them have literally changed my life. Thank you, John and Leslie! (Note: John Truby is answering these questions, but Leslie's input is in them, as well!)
What made you decide to take your extraordinarily brilliant (trust me, it is) story structure program and rework it for novelists?
Novelists are so concerned with the
right word that I think they sometimes forget about story. Sure, readers love
words, and love what beautiful language can do. But the main reason they read
is for story. In fact, the single most important element for success in any written
medium, including novels, is strong narrative drive. I see too many novelists
who don’t know this or don’t know how to get it on the page.
You'll
be presenting seminars on this along with the superb novelist Leslie Lehr.
What's she taught you that you didn't know already?
More like what hasn’t she taught me. My
expertise is story, in any medium. She’s very strong on story structure, and
knows how the novel medium changes the requirements for a good story. She’s also
an expert on prose techniques that are unique to narrative fiction.
How
do you go from one form to the other? (When I first started writing scripts, I
was told that they read like novels!)
That’s a big subject we will cover in
the class. How do you go from script to novel, and how do you go from novel to script?
Both have to tell a good story but they do it in different ways. The biggest
differences between novel and film are structure and point of view. You have to
know how to translate these elements above all.
What's
the biggest difference between structure for novels and films?
Plot. You need much more of it in
novels, but it doesn’t have to have the same dramatic punch that plot has in
movies. It’s a very special skill to be able to weave a complex plot, but also
stretch it over what is typically a much longer time frame.
What's
the biggest mistake you think writers make in writing novels?
They think they can just start writing
and figure out the story as they go. Novels need story structure even more than
films because the reader has no visuals to rely on, only imagination. Most of
all, writers often have no idea how to create narrative drive.
Many
novelists I know are resistant to structure, no matter how much I praise it.
They think they have to "follow the muse." They also are sure that if
there are no surprises for the writer, there won't be surprises for the reader.
And, of course, once I get them to try structure, they love it, and they
realize that's not true at all. But what do YOU say to writers?
I tell them, go ahead and “follow the
muse.” Here’s what’s going to happen. You’ll get about 40 pages into your novel
and find out you’ve written yourself into a story dead end. You stop writing
the book and then repeat the same process with the next book.
Story is all about seeing the big
picture, along with the major story beats, as a whole. If you get the right structure
up front, you’ll have plenty of surprises writing the scenes. But you’ll also
have a scaffolding that will tell you which creative surprises will work and
which ones won’t (and the vast majority won’t). As Leslie puts it, how can you
hit the bullseye if you can’t see the target?
I'm
curious, I've been applying your seven steps--which are extraordinary on
target--for my novels. Are there additional steps and issues novelists should
be aware of?
Oh yes. The seven steps are great for
figuring out the anchor steps of the entire story. But for really great plot,
you have to know how to use many other steps. And that’s a big deal for
novelists, because you have to string a lot more plot over the 300-400 pages in
a typical novel. For example, one of those additional plot steps is Revelation.
Novels have 3 to 4 times as many reveals as a screenplay. We’re going to spend
a lot of time talking about this all-important element in writing novels.
Are
the starting points for novels and scripts pretty much the same? Writing
something that will change YOUR life? Have a character with a strong arc and a
moral dilemma?
Absolutely. The fundamentals of great
story are the same for every medium. But novelists also have to know the unique
ways of setting up narrative drive, beginning with a strong desire line. We’ll
explain how to do that in the course.
Many
novels--and films--have experimental forms or ensemble players. There is no
straight through line--or is there? I'm thinking about films like Momento or
Grand Canyon (which had multiple points of views, much like novels), and novels
that play with form like Louisa Meets Bear--which is a series of
interconnecting stories that all flow back to two initial characters. Do
the structural components still apply?
Yes they do, but as you can imagine
they apply differently. These are multi-hero, multi-POV stories. This is a
major part of the novel world, much more so than Hollywood film. Above all, you
have to know how to connect all the story strands to get that through line. We’ll
talk about a number of techniques you can use to do multi-strand stories correctly.
You do it quite well in your writing, Caroline, and Leslie will talk about a technique
you use in IS THIS TOMORROW in the class.
What
are you most excited about in teaching this upcoming class in Story for Novel?
I’m a big believer in writers going for
greatness, which is why I’m so excited about sharing 10 techniques common to
all Great American Novels. Obviously, no one can teach someone how to write the
Great American Novel. But I believe these 10 techniques, which are extremely
detailed, can give a writer a tremendous advantage if he or she wants to take
on this immense challenge.
I've
been told that if you are a good screenwriter, you'll be a lousy novelist--and
vice versa. I refuse to believe this is true. Why would someone think this?
This is nonsense. Yes, if a novelist
doesn’t learn the unique elements of the screenplay medium, he or she will
fail, and vice versa. But that assumes writers can’t master new techniques. If
a writer learns how to tell a good story, along with the special techniques of
that form, they can be great in both mediums.
Will
there be a book on this, I hope? I use your Anatomy of Story for all my
classes.
That’s
a great idea, Caroline. I was busy last year creating my Myth Class, which
includes the beats for three new Female Myth stories I think will be huge the
next few years. But Leslie has been talking about a Story for Novel book as
well, since she uses Anatomy of Story
in her work as the TWS Novel Consultant and adds a lot of focused information
when she works with writers individually. Now that I know you’d be interested
in that book too, it may just be a matter of time. Stay tuned.
2 comments:
I reaally hope you write the book!
I know a bazillion people who would attend this in NYC! Great post, thanks.
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