Dave Amaditz
At this year's Western Pennsylvania SCBWI annual conference I
listened to our main speaker, Jonathan Gottschall, (The Storytelling Animal: How Stories Make Us Human) talk about the importance of story. He reminded us that story is everywhere, that it
has been with us throughout all of man's history and that it comes to us in many
forms. It was told orally in prehistoric times. It was documented on cave walls
to help remember, or to perhaps celebrate a successful hunt. Today, having evolved
over time, story comes to us in movies, music, television, and advertising. And
most importantly, for us as writers, in the form of books.
The speech reminded me I should be constantly alert for story
ideas, for the way story is told, and for ways to incorporate these new ideas
into my own writing.
Why then was I so surprised, that while beginning research for the
ending of my novel on how write an investigative report, one of the first
pieces of information the author, Luuk Sengers (The Hidden Scenario: Plotting
and Outlining Investigative Stories) conveyed was that underlying all the
facts and figures you might uncover while doing research, there must be a
story.
A story in investigative writing?
I shouldn't have been
surprised, yet as I thought back on newspaper or magazine articles I had read, I
realized they were right. Story was at the heart of every piece.
Facts and figures were included, but they would be meaningless without story.
As I proceed with my writing I must keep this in mind. Setting,
voice and plotting are all important, but where would they be without story?
http://jonathangottschall.com/
http://www.storybasedinquiry.com/luuk-sengers/
http://jonathangottschall.com/
Ah yes, story is at the heart of most everything, isn't it? Or, maybe this just a writer's perspective. : )
ReplyDeleteYes, Cynthia. And we as writers are tasked in part with finding stories that will resonate with large numbers of people.
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