The Writer's Room

Eat, Sleep, Write. Repeat.

Eat, Sleep, Write. Repeat.

Eat, Sleep, Write. Repeat.

Do you have a story to tell?

What are your genres? Would you like to write a Fairy Tale? A Romantic Comedy? An Action/Adventure story? A Historical Epic/Romance/Thriller? Do you want to write a novel? A screenplay? A stage play? How do you figure this out? Where do you begin? Are you stuck?

How did The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, a 28-page short story Fantasy/Drama, by F. Scott Fitzgerald evolve into a screenplay and produced film?
How did The Old Man and the Sea, a novella Drama/Adventure story, by Earnest Hemingway and adapted from a newspaper article evolve into a screenplay and produced film?
How did the stage play musical, West Side Story, a Romance/Drama evolve from Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet?

How did the screenplay for The Titanic, a Historical Epic/Romance/Drama evolve from the Romeo and Juliet stage play?

  1. For answers, learn the nuts and bolts of storytelling using screenplay techniques for novel, film, and stage. Begin your journey by using the How To Get Started posts by Arkay Garber and try to apply the methodology to your story idea.
  2. Read all of the posts on Writing Tips and jot down a very rough outline.
  3. Check out prices for story coaching, story seminars, etc. for novel, film, and stage. Compare the prices with the $87 for a one-hour session with Arkay Garber in which you will receive:
  • Handouts on Character Development, Premise Line
  • Direction for a graph of your story idea, including Story Beats
  • Direction for the genres your story idea comprises
  • A summary of the key value systems inherent in your story idea
  • Enough content in the one hour to keep you VERY BUSY for a month

Writing question from Curious Jane:

Q: What is the difference between writing story for film, novel, or stage?

A: For starters: The spine, heart, and soul of the story are the same for all three mediums. But the formatting is obviously different. A novel might be 108,000 words or 400 pages, with chapters. Each scene and chapter need to be structured to include the spine, heart, and soul. A film script will be approximately 110 pages of time, location, setting, and dialog, but must include the spine, heart, and soul for every scene. A stage play will be 105 pages of time, location, setting, and dialog, allowing for a 2-act structure with a 15-minute intermission, but again, must include the spine, heart, and soul for every scene.

Writing question from Hopelessly Unfocused:

Q: I completed ten chapters of my novel, but I’m stuck. The document has been sitting in my computer for six months. I keep going back to it because I do want to finish it, but I’m feeling that I have lost direction.

A: De-constructing a broken house is more difficult than razing it to the ground and starting from scratch with an outline which should include: Character web, premise line, designing principle, hero’s goal, opponents’ goals, genre beats, twelve sequences with story beats, and more. Without this advance work, the writer will be lost and directionless. It’s happened to so many writers! Like refusing to read the directions for a new t.v., or study the history of an ancient town, or walk the walk of characters before writing even one word…advance planning will make the writing so much easier!

Writing question from Pantser Pat:

Q: I like to sit and write from the heart and let the process flow. I don’t see the point of structuring a story when I have it formulated in my head.

A: With my method of taking a month or six months or however long it takes to do an outline and develop characters and get down the premise line and the designing principle, and the genre story beats, it will then free up all the creative juices and you will write from the heart. But there’s no point in satisfying your own desire to avoid structure and then have your readers totally lost and frustrated. You might be able to self-publish, but your audience will not appreciate your lack of attention to the spine, heart, and soul of your story.

Writing question from Late to the Party:

Q: I’m eighty-years old and have been putting off telling the story of my life, so my grandchildren will have some feeling of heritage and pride in our family struggles. Is it too late to write a novel, film, or stage play?

A: Writing is the one art that travels the time universe without complaint. If you have a family history to relate and want to turn it into a novel, you can fictionalize some events and yet, follow structure at the same time and end up with a readable, enjoyable treasure for your offspring. You can journal your experiences as well. In journaling, there is a format to follow so that your readers don’t get bored or off-focus. You can write a compelling stage play or screenplay for film. The sky is the limit! Age has nothing to do with writing success. Great writing transcends all time!

Scroll to Top
Skip to content