Plot seems like an easy thing to identify. We follow plots in the novels we read, the movies we watch, the TV series we binge. But when it comes to writing, plot can be a little harder to find.
This handy quiz will help you find your plot in your memoir memories and nonfiction notes. Check your story against this list and remember that your story - even nonfiction and memoir - needs to have a plot, an adventure, a change for your protagonist (even if it’s you) over the course of your story.
It’s there, somewhere, waiting for you to find it.
That’s what plot is, after all. Change over time. And whether you are writing your own story or sharing your expertise, your book needs to show your reader that something changes.
That’s what makes it worth turning the page.
Plot or Not: A Timeline
Many writers start with a timeline.
You’ve worked long and hard to organize your stories and information. You’ve mapped out the dates and put everything in the correct order. You’ve pored over old journals and documents to make sure that your timing is correct. Everything hinges on the reader knowing how things happened and when and why and you’ve got it ready.
This feels a plot…
Look, you say, Change over time! Literally, I wrote a timeline! I used colored markers and everything!
So, is this a plot?
Sadly, NOT a plot!
A timeline is a lovely way to organize your thoughts and ideas, and is often a very necessary step in developing your story. However, a timeline is simply a list of things that happened.
The fact that some change occurred to move from Point A to Point B is not inherently obvious.
A timeline is a great way to make order out of chaos, but a plot can be messy (and usually is). Change is rarely easy, rarely predictable, and rarely obvious. As a writer, it is up to you to work through the cause and effect from one point on that timeline to the next.
Plot or Not: A Family Tree
Admit it, you love Ancestry.com
Or you’ve taken one of those DNA tests and opened a conversation with “I’m 7% French – would you believe it!”
(True story: I once had dinner with the guy who dressed in Lederhosen in the Ancestry commercial. It was his true story – he really was shocked to find out about those ancestors! And he’s a really great guy, too!)
That family tree that you’ve worked so hard to build, and those stories you’ve collected from great-great grandparents who braved the unthinkable has inspired you to tell their stories. You are the one to preserve their legacy.
What a responsibility. I am so impressed by you already!
But, is gathering all those stories and people on that tree a plot?
No, NOT a plot!
A family tree is just a list of people. Their stories need more than branches to connect them. As an author, it is your joy and privilege and incredible opportunity to pull out the story that weaves throughout that tree.
But your reader wants to know more than the fact that these people lived. Your reader wants to know how their lives came together to change in an enduring way.
Think of your family tree instead as your cast of characters. Their details and experiences are essential to your story, so it’s fantastic that you have them organized already. Now it’s time to set the protagonist in the middle and build that plot through the branches.
What are the changes that happen to your protagonist through encountering these other incredible people at important moments in their lives?
There’s where your plot begins.
Plot or Not: Data Set
You’ve gathered all the info and carefully organized it in that massive excel spreadsheet or folder of word docs.
For a researcher like you, this feels like the beginning. You have the pieces of the puzzle. You know what message they combine to tell.
But is it a plot?
No, NOT a plot!
A spreadsheet, like our lists and trees, is just an ordering of things.
Yes, they sing to you. You see all the beauty of their interrelationships and outcomes. But your task, your challenge, your great honor and responsibility as a writer is to translate that wonderful data into a story that best expresses the way the data will change the reader’s life.
It may be that your protagonist heroically takes your reader through the journey to make sense of all that you have researched. Or it may be that for this nonfiction story, you need to remember that the person who changes the most from page one to page 250 is the reader themself.
Organizing your information is so necessary to your great story.
Now it’s time to begin to put it into action.
Plot or Not: That Graph from High School
Who remembers this one?
We had tests on it in my high school. It was one of those things that was both incredibly fun (I mean, who didn’t feel cool because you now knew the word “denouement?”) and incredibly annoying (did we really need to fill in exactly what scene was the climax of The Crucible?).
So when you think plot today, perhaps this basic school memory floats in. But maybe you think this was just some basic quiz information, not really applicable in “the real world.”
Is this old-school graph really a plot?
YES, it is a plot!
It may feel basic, but you can use something like this to guide you through any book. It doesn’t matter if it’s The Great Gatsby, Wild, or The Devil in the White City. If you’re not sure, go back to your favorite book, that one that you someday want your book to be just like. See where the points on this chart fall. Trust me, they’re in there.
So when you are starting to translate your idea, or your timeline, or your list of people and things into a plot, ask yourself where will these points be for your protagonist?
That uphill stretch? Those are changes. That fancy denouement? It’s time to write one of your own.
Plot or Not: This Wild Vonnegut Graph
When Kurt Vonnegut famously explained how stories take shape, he drew this.
His weird squiggles look very different from that high school chart we just talked about.
So is this zig-zagging roller-coaster really a plot?
YES, it is a plot!
Take a moment and listen to Vonnegut explain it himself.
If our high school chart was “Plot 101,” then Vonnegut’s theory of charting a plot is your upper level course. It takes into account the fact that plots have nuance, change is never, in fact, a steady line uphill, and every plot turns and reveals change in different ways all the way to the final page.
It’s time to add momentum and authenticity to that basic school chart.
How would you graph your story this way? Try it out.
Plot or Not: Pixar Rule Number 4
Our final consideration comes from a now-famous list of storytelling genius set forth at Pixar (yes, that Pixar). These rules for storytelling have supposedly been used to map out every single Pixar project.
Rule No. 4 is a graph of a story. It starts with “Once upon a time…” of course.
But before you tell me, “Caroline, I’m writing nonfiction. There’s no once upon a time…” or “Caroline, my memoir is real, not a fairy tale…” let me ask you to look closer at the steps in Rule 4.
If you fill in this Pixar madlib, do you have a plot?
YES, it is a plot!
This is my favorite way to find a plot in a hurry, in fact. And it works every time!
It doesn’t matter how data-heavy your story is, if you lean into this idea that everything happens because of the previous thing, you have a plot!
Because of is a promise that you are only including the next story or the next detail because something has changed from your previous chapter or moment.
Because of is a promise to your reader that they will learn something. It makes them trust you because you’ve promised logical changes, no surprises. The story will make sense and, at the end, they will learn something totally new.
Now it’s your turn.
I challenge you to try it out.
Fill in that Pixar madlib, even if your instinct is to say “No, this isn’t for me!”
And, if you need help making your plot bigger and better and filling it out into a whole amazing book, I have even more ideas in my back pocket I’m happy to share.
Use the comments and let me know: what is your plot?