Writing Short Leaves Less Room to Ramp Up Trouble

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Image courtesy madartzgraphics via Pixabay

In an article for Writer’s Digest, Lisa Cupolo offers advice for creating trouble for your characters within the confines of a short story. “Stories are a window into a life, not the whole enchilada,” she says. “These five tips for making sure you’re creating enough conflict to keep your reader turning the pages may seem like basics, but I still use them as good reminders about what’s crucial to writing an engaging short story.”

  1. Have your character want something. “Your character needs to be presented in a way that they desire something, but they do not have it yet,” Cupolo says. “To know a character is to know what they want, and the story follows that pursuit.”
  2. Create a situation that involves danger. This can be serious, life-threatening danger, or something that threatens to upset your protagonist’s status quo.
  3. Conjure up complications. “Whatever the situation you create, add some complication to it,” Cupolo advises. “Be on the lookout for plots that surprise you. It’s usually a good thing.”
  4. Hide the real problem. Whatever goes wrong for your character, the surface problem isn’t usually the real issue.
  5. Present the trouble early. “It’s almost a cliché to say write a story and then delete the first two pages to get to the ‘heat’ or ‘pulse’ of it,” Cupolo notes.