Here it is -- the whole thing:
Number a piece of paper from one to fifteen. Write a one-line blurb of where the story begins next to number one. Then jump down to the bottom and write the ending next to number fifteen. Now go back to the top and write a blurb for what happens after the opening next to number two. Scoot down to number fourteen to write what happened just before the story ends. Continue bouncing up and down from the top of the page to the bottom and in a matter of minutes—voila! Modify this basic outline of the entire novel with additional sequences, subplots, and character PMA+A to bring the story to life.
Yup, that's it. It's called Meet-in-the-Middle, and it's been used by scriptwriters for decades. It only creates a bare-bones structure, of course, but often it’s those missing middle points that cause Writer’s Block. The fifteen scenes created with Meet-in-the-Middle are the highlights, or major and secondary plot points of the story.
So let's do one to see how it works. The example below is a quick boy-girl story mapped out in eight easy steps by my friend and I over breakfast one morning. We just wanted to play with the technique. It took us about 12-13 minutes to put this together between mastication and coffee slurps. Note: for the record, my friend is ex-military/merc/cop. He writes "attack" poetry.
STEP 1
The story begins when boy meets girl. The boy is Bill; the girl is Sandy.
The story ends with Bill killing a murderer. Why? See note above.
1. Bill and Sandy meet.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15. Bill kills the murderer.
STEP 2
Back to the top. Bill and Sandy's true-love-sailing-smoothly needs some kind of interference or there is no story. What better interference than an ex-lover showing up? Whether it is Bill’s ex-wife or an ex-girlfriend does not matter right now.
1. Bill and Sandy meet.
2. Bill's ex shows up.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14. Bill finds Sandy being held/tortured by murderer.
15. Bill kills the murderer.
Back down here. There’s really no point in Bill killing a murderer unless that murderer is somehow impacting him personally. What would cause a nice, even-tempered guy like Bill to go after a murderer? Maybe he thinks the lout has hurt his girlfriend. Guess he has to find her there to know that…
STEP 3
Up here again. They’ve met; Bill’s ex has shown up. The only logical next step is for Bill and Sandy to get into a fight over the ex, eh? Welcome to Boy loses Girl.
1. Bill and Sandy meet.
2. Bill's ex shows up.
3. Sandy and Bill fight and break up.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13. The murderer tortures Sandy.
14. Bill finds Sandy being held/tortured by murderer.
15. Bill kills the murderer.
If Bill’s going to find Sandy with the murderer, the murderer must be taking his time rather simply killing her. Hence, a torture scene.
STEP 4
What’s a girl to do when she’s just broken up with her lover because his ex showed up unannounced? Probably go drown her sorrows at a local bar. She's pretty vulnerable, so it wouldn’t occur to her that the guy she meets at the bar might want more than just a goodnight kiss.
1. Bill and Sandy meet.
2. Bill's ex shows up.
3. Sandy and Bill fight and break up.
4. Sandy goes to a nightclub and meets the murderer.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12. Murderer kidnaps Sandy.
13. The murderer tortures Sandy.
14. Bill finds Sandy being held/tortured by murderer.
15. Bill kills the murderer.
If the murder is going to hold/torture Sandy, then he logically has to kidnap her first!
STEP 5
Bill loves Sandy, not his ex. Is he going to sit around and dilly-dally with an old girlfriend/lover/wife when his current heartthrob is out there somewhere, maybe meeting someone new? He is not! He’s going to go out and look for her.
1. Bill and Sandy meet.
2. Bill's ex shows up.
3. Sandy and Bill fight and break up.
4. Sandy goes to a nightclub and meets the murderer.
5. Bill heads out to look for Sandy.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11. Bill's ex sics the murderer on Sandy, and in return, he kills her.
12. Murderer kidnaps Sandy.
13. The murderer tortures Sandy.
14. Bill finds Sandy being held/tortured by murderer.
15. Bill kills the murderer.
Why did the murderer decide to pick Sandy, out off all the girls in the bars and on the streets, to kidnap and torture? Why, Bill’s ex must have sic’d him on her. So naturally, he’d turn around and kill her. Hey, he's a murderer, remember?
STEP 6
Bill has just walked out on his ex to go look for his current love. Is she going to take that? Absolutely not! If she didn’t care about him, why did she show up again in the first place? She’s still got her charms, and he’s pretty vulnerable right now since Sandy walked out. All she’s got to do is follow him and seduce him the way she used to before they broke up.
1. Bill and Sandy meet.
2. Bill's ex shows up.
3. Sandy and Bill fight and break up.
4. Sandy goes to a nightclub and meets the murderer.
5. Bill heads out to look for Sandy
6. Bill's ex follows him and brings him home to bed.
7.
8.
9.
10. Bill throws his ex out.
11. Bill's ex sics the murderer on Sandy and in return, he kills her.
12. Murderer kidnaps Sandy.
13. The murderer tortures Sandy.
14. Bill finds Sandy being held/tortured by murderer.
15. Bill kills the murderer.
How would the ex sic the murderer on Sandy if Bill hadn’t told her to leave? He does, thereby setting the rest of the action in motion.
STEP 7
Sandy still loves Bill. She’s left the bar with the mur-derer, which is why Bill and the ex don’t find her, but she doesn’t go home with the guy, she gives him a handshake and one of those “if only we’d met at another time” lines and goes home where, of course, the ex has bedded her honey-bunny.
1. Bill and Sandy meet.
2. Bill's ex shows up.
3. Sandy and Bill fight and break up.
4. Sandy goes to a nightclub and meets the murderer.
5. Bill heads out to look for Sandy
6. Bill's ex follows him and brings him home to bed.
7. After kissing the murderer goodnight, Sandy finds Bill in bed with his ex.
8.
9. Bill tells his ex he loves Sandy; she threatens to make him sorry.
10. Bill throws his ex out.
11. Bill's ex sics the murderer on Sandy and in return, he kills her
12. Murderer kidnaps Sandy.
13. The murderer tortures Sandy.
14. Bill finds Sandy being held/tortured by murderer.
15. Bill kills the murderer.
Before Bill throws his ex out, he’s got to realize he really loves Sandy, not her. And since she decides to be a creep and set Sandy up for the murderer, Bill probably tells her in such a way that she gets furious and vengeful. How would he know there’s a murderer running around out there?
STEP 8
The story has met in the middle. Right after Sandy finds Bill in bed with his ex and just before Bill tells the ex he loves Sandy, not her, Sandy has to become vulnerable to the murderer. Ergo, she logically runs out of the house.
1. Bill and Sandy meet.
2. Bill's ex shows up.
3. Sandy and Bill fight and break up.
4. Sandy goes to a nightclub and meets the murderer.
5. Bill heads out to look for Sandy
6. Bill's ex follows him and brings him home to bed.
7. After kissing the murderer goodnight, Sandy finds Bill in bed with his ex.
8. Devastated by Bill's infidelity, Sandy goes running out of the house.
9. Bill tells his ex he loves Sandy; she threatens to make him sorry.
10. Bill throws his ex out.
11. Bill's ex sics the murderer on Sandy and in return, he kills her.
12. Murderer kidnaps Sandy.
13. The murderer tortures Sandy.
14. Bill finds Sandy being held/tortured by murderer.
15. Bill kills the murderer.
There it is: a complete plot foundation with plenty of room to impose character quirks and interaction, subplots, characterization, motivation, etc., etc., etc. Continue to map out the "What happens next?" in an outline or do a seat-of-the-pants with these 15 points as your backup. Either way, this is the spinal column of the story, so to speak, to which appendages, sinew, muscle, even toenails can be added; i.e., a basic story that can now be fleshed out into chapters.
Is that easy enough? This forum is the perfect place to brainstorm each other's Meet-in-the-Middle plot. Oh, I almost forgot one of the best aspects of MitM: it's reusable. If everyone reading this post wrote a story using the 15 points above, every single manuscript would be different!
Your turn! Start your MitM plot in a new topic so everyone can brainstorm with you, and let's get those stories plotted!
Excerpted from Before Copy Editing by Claudia Suzanne (WCPublishing, 2010) http://wambtac.com
Reprinted with permission from the author.
23 comments:
Hi, Mayra,
Outlining a book is important. Otherwise, your characters may simply hijack your book and it
becomes something you never intended. Of course, that can be good or bad. But it really is best to work from an outline. I do it myself.
Jacqueline Seewald
STACY'S SONG, coming of age YA novel soon to be published by
L&L Dreamspell
Hi, Mayra,
Outlining a book is important. Otherwise, your characters may simply hijack your book and it
becomes something you never intended. Of course, that can be good or bad. But it really is best to work from an outline. I do it myself.
Jacqueline Seewald
STACY'S SONG, coming of age YA novel soon to be published by
L&L Dreamspell
Ha! I'm not an outliner, but I did participate in Claudia's workshop at the Muse Online Writers Conference and tried this -- and it's just about the right level of detail for a non-outliner like me.
I tried it on a story I've been thinking about, a sci fi thing I may try for NaNoWriMo -- if I do, it will be both my first sci fi and my first adult novel.
We'll see, but the technique rocks.
Hi Mayra,
This simply ingenious, thanks for sharing it. I will havwe to put this into practical use.
Nicole Weaver
htp://www.melangeofcultures.wordpress.com
I'll have to try this technique! Mayra, have you used it? If so, I'm wondering how much character development you've done before you begin. My concern might be that the story might get too predictable unless your characters create a real twist.
Thank you all for your comments!
I just started using this to do a first rough plan of the plot for a proposal I'm preparing.
I have a basic idea of the characters and story but nothing detailed yet.
I think that this outline can help in helping you with the structure and rising action. It certainly leaves a lot of space for changes.
What a fascinating idea! I'll degfinitely try it. Love how it's called "the spinal column" of your novel.
~Debbie
What a good organized plan to keep your storyline on track. Thanks for sharing. I will link to this from my blog today.
Have a great day.
Wow! You make it seem really easy by plotting things out like that. I am eager to try it and hopeful that it will work. Thanks for sharing.
What a clever idea! And it's halfway between elaborate, detailed plotting, which makes me bored with a book before I write it, and no plotting at all, which results in a mess. I'll probably use this idea with fewer plot points for children's books.
This was a great workshop. I already outlined but this helps even more.
This is great, Mayra! Thanks so much for sharing!
wow - you make it sound so easy. great tips.
I love this - simple and brilliant!
parenting ad absurdum (MBC)
Your outline sounds great for a novel, but what about a picture book? Would you use this as a template for the text to see if it would work for the illustrations?
I am trying to put together a Christmas story book. I have the beginning with the problem to be solved and the final solution ending. I will have to try this idea out for myself.
I am currently reading, Yes! You can Learn How to Write Children's Books, Get Them Published and Build a Successful Writing Career by Nancy Sanders. I am blogging my reaction and results. If you would like to hear about the results in action, here is where you can read more... http://TheWriteChris.blogspot.com
What I love about this is the way that the middle becomes inevitable. It's easy to imagine that if I know how a story ends, I can get it there, even then get lost in the mire halfway along the way.
Thanks for this technique, Mayra. I want to try it to see if it makes the scenes in my story more logical (I can't imagine it won't). :)
I'm struggling with the outline for my current (and first) novel, but you make it look EASY! I'm going to try it. Thanks!
Your blog is great, too, by the way.
I teach writing and tell my students that I have never been able to understand outlining in order to use it. I just write, but this looks like fun, and may help me. Thanks for sharing
Very interesting device. I think I'll give it a go. Thanks for sharing!
I have a book idea, but I know where to begin laying it all out. Thanks for sharing this method! Now to figure out how I'd like it to end... ;)
Aaaaaaaawesome!
Thanks so much for this. With less than a week to go before Nano, this is going to come in handy. I'm going to try it out & I'll try to post it.
Thank you so much. Detailled plotting has never been one of my strong points but this is the kind of clarity and succinctness I like! Just something so I can see the whole picture before me!
That was a beaYOOtiful outline. Thanks so much!
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