Okay, you wimps. Only Lady Glamis, Becky, and B J Keltz had the guts to really chime in. JK 😉
Glamis said a story is overcoming conflict. Becky agreed with her. Beautiful, precise, and accurate.
B J Keltz also said it needed an awakening or a change in understanding.
So, which is right?
Both.
Why? Because the answer varies according to the individual. Different people like different kinds of stories–that’s why books are so varied.
So, what’s my answer? (drum roll, please): A story is a satisfying emotional journey.
Your mode of transportation = emotion. The destination = satisfaction. Having trouble figuring out the what your mode is? Write down your top 10 favorite books, figure out what emotions they provoke, and you’ll have your map. If you find out what you want out of a story, you’ll be able to write it into a story.
For your own sakes, figure it out and let it guide you.
Author
A note to BJ – I am planning a series of posts that asks that huge question – WHAT IS ART. Be afraid. Very afraid.
Amber, great explanations here. Thank you! This sparks some great ideas for me. 🙂
The question here was a bit unclear. I wrote a list a while back about my favorite things to find in a novel– and my un-favorites. It showed me *why* I fell in love with certain novels, and why I couldn’t even finish others.
For example, I love truth-telling as a form a riddling. This is a specific example of a broader stoke of what I love: cleverness, clarity and honesty.
I always feel a bit miffed by “reveals” that show the MC had more information than the reader. But there’s a whole list there if you are actually curious for more ;o)