Loglines.Premise. The Story Idea. The Pitch.
For a newbie like myself,these can seem bewildering concepts which are only relevant to screenwriters and of no value to fiction writers.
Wrong.
What do you say when someone who is genuinely interested in your work asks the killer question ‘What’s the Story about?’ and 10 minutes later you are still giving him the backstory about the hero’s demonic mother in the Ukraine, and your potential agent/publisher/friend is desperately signalling to a colleague to find an excuse to get away from you.
Why?
Because you are boring, rambling, and worse, you have not answered the question. Or, even worse, you are just getting into your stride on all of the research you completed on the causes of the Franco=Prussian War and – wait for it – there is no story because you are still looking for characters who can postulate your theory.
And in doing so you have just demonstrated that you are anything else EXCEPT a professional author.
AHHH! Career alert!
So. What is your Story About?
To me, I have to be able to give a simple answer like this -
My story is about someone [ your protagonist]….who strives for [goal]… andthis stands in his way [ forces of opposition and antagonism].
WHO he is, WHAT he wants, and WHAT he is going to have to overcome to get it.
Examples?
For a short story it could be;
‘ Little Sarah, aged 4 and a half, is promised by her mother that she can have a chocolate ice cream, butfirst she has to eat her dinner vegetables. And they are ALL GREEN. Can she survive such horror?’
For a movie, how about;
‘Set in West Texas, a man on the run with a suitcase full of money is pursuedby a number of individuals.’
Or
‘ When an attorney gets zapped by his son’s birthday wish, he learns that he can no longer tell a lie even when he tries, so he must now win the biggest case of his career by being honest.’
One sentence. A logline.
This is a SELLING TOOL foryour work. The 30 second elevator pitch.
Butwhat if you want a logline to keep YOU, the writer, on track during the writing and editing and re-writing. The paragraph you have taped to your PC monitor to remind you that this is what you are meant to be writing about?
For me, that is when the Logline becomes the Story Line. And it has to serve different functions.
*Clearly states The Main Desire line for your hero which will drive the story from start to finish. This is the spine and passionate force in your story. Even for ice cream.
*Sets up the Story Question. We know the tale is over when the Goal set out inthe Desire line is achieved and the reader turns the last page.
*Sets up the Character Arc for the protagonist.
SO. What do I need to know BEFORE I can create a compelling, and hopefully High Concept Compass Logline/Story Line for my latest bestseller?
*I need to know who my Protagonist is.
*What is she like? What are the character traits which make her unique and interesting. Her backstory and, most importantly,what motivates her to make the decisions she is taking in her ‘ordinary life’.
*I need to know how my Protagonist will change by the end of the story- and why. I can then use this to focus on key aspects of my heroine’s character.
*I need to know what the Inciting Incident is ,and how this will create a compelling GOAL for my Protagonist which becomes theStory Question which will be answered by the end of the story.
*What will she have to ENDURE on this journey?
*Who or What is going to block my heroine from achieving her goal?
For me, I have to complete at least a first draft OUTLINE of my novel BEFORE I can answer these questions. The key turning points. A character bio for hero and her antagonist.
In some cases I have to write the first draft before I can answer these questions, since my ideas were still fluid at the Story Idea point.
I did not know HOW the character arc would be complete until my heroine took me there.
But I did have a basic Story Line from Day One.
I THEN use the extended logline to help during the revisions and editing.
PLUS I can use this one paragraph outline to create the perfect Back Cover Blurb for the book, and the extended selling material. Not a word wasted.
No one said this was easy…but, sheesh.
LOL. Happy writing.
Nina Harrington.For Warm, Witty and Wildly Romantic Fiction.
Harlequin Mills and Boon Romance Line Author.
http://ninaharrington.com./
Header Promotion













Terrific
What a terrific piece of writing advice, Nina. Even after 50+ books, it's always good to be reminded of the basics.
And clearly it works! Many congratulations on your RT Top Pick for Hired: Sassy Assistant!
Liz
CHRISTMAS ANGEL FOR THE BILLIONAIRE/HER DESERT DREAM
Annie and Lydia; two women, trading places, changing lives...
LOVES ME, LOVES ME NOT, Mira, Feb paperback
LORDS OF THE DESERT, with Susan Stephens & Alexandra Sellers, Feb
http://www.lizfielding.co
oh, so thats....
I had no idea what a logline was. Thank you for telling me. I'd heard people mention them before, but had never actually known what it was. Silly, but true.
Thank you
Thank you Liz. I am delighted that my second book for the Romance Line 'Hired: Sassy Assistant' has been recommended as a Top Pick for January by the Romantic Times Magazine - and rather humbled and in awe at being on the same page as Dan Brown and Tami Hoag! LOL.
And I am sure that you being far too modest.
Thank you all the same. I am a craft junkie and proud!
Nina Harrington.For Warm, Witty and Wildly Romantic Fiction.
Harlequin Mills and Boon Romance Line Author.
http://ninaharrington.com./
Writing
Even though I am not a writer, I enjoy learning about the writing craft. Thank you for the information.
Linda Henderson
Great Post
First, congrats on the RT Top Pick! Woo-Hoo!
Second, I'm a paragraph girl myself. I love the one-paragraph summary so much I teach it in most of my workshops! It's a great tool for keeping a writer on track.
Great information!
susan
susan meier
THE MAGIC OF A FAMILY CHRISTMAS, Harlequin Romance, 11/09
Nina,
Congratulations on being an RT Top Pick!
Adopt a shelter pet. Save a life; gain a best friend for life.
View my DD's very public video acting debut at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-E-v05kMucw.
July 2009 Member of the Month