Story Plan Checklist: Plot Conflicts
Oct. 28th, 2009 09:51 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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Skillful pilots gain their reputation from storms and tempests.
- Epicurus

What storms will your character survive?
External plot conflicts are the outer story elements that stand in the character's way of realizing or obtaining what it is that he or she desires above all else.
Further, as Karen Wiesner advises:
Plot conflicts must be so urgent as to require immediate attention. The audience must be able to identify with both the internal and external conflicts the character faces in order to be involved enough to care about the outcome. Plot conflicts work hand-in-glove with character conflicts. You can't have one without the other...
For my protagonist, he must discover who or what is responsible for the inconceivable death of a woman, promised to one man, loved by another, to prove his own innocence and prevent a war that can not be won by either side. Standing in his way is the girl's father who guards a dark secret, the protagonist's own men who have been ordered to arrest him and an unknown enemy who has framed him for the girl's murder.
And you, Nano Writer, what external forces are working against your character? What stands in his or her way of achieving their goal?
Tomorrow, we're going to review the work we've done this month and put our novel checklist together... until then, keep writing!
(no subject)
Date: 2009-10-28 06:08 pm (UTC)