Poynter Online
Go


Top Story

News Sites Integrate Live Video into Debate & Election Coverage
Most Recent Articles
Most E-mailed
Recent Comments
Recent Tags
Community Activity

Poynter Training
Poynter Seminars
Small, in-person training experiences.
News University
Today's most popular courses on NewsU, Poynter's e-learning site for journalists.
Webinars
Our online classroom is just a click away. Learn more.
All Webinars
Home > Reporting, Writing & Editing
Tools: Text Sizeor, Print, e-mail, Permalink, Share
4:11 PM  Feb. 26, 2007
Creating the Serial Narrative: A Starter Kit
Chapter Six: Say the Secret Word
By Roy Clark (More articles by this author)
Senior Scholar, Poynter Institute

More in this series

Every craft has its own secret lingo. By the time you get down to genre and sub-genre, the language of craft becomes more and more specialized. For the newcomer, it can sound strange and alienating, which is why I've compiled this simple glossary of words used to describe elements of the serial narrative. Along with the 50 strategies of "Writing Tools," it should give you the critical vocabulary you need to take the next big step in your writing.

CREATING THE SERIAL NARRATIVE: A STARTER KIT
 

More in this series:



Writing Tools: The Blog
Arc: Think of a story told in chronological order as a straight line. Now draw an arc from the first big crisis to the final resolution. That big movement of the story is the arc. Love lost to love regained. Treasure lost to treasure found. Or treasure lost forever, something more precious found.

Casting: The decision of which characters to follow and include in the serial. To help in this process, the writer usually considers which characters have the most at stake. It requires discipline to exclude marginal characters, who may have given you the gift of their time and energy, but exclude you must.

Character-Driven: A serial that focuses on one or two main characters, that follows them on a journey of discovery or through a crisis. The reader learns about the characters' strengths and weaknesses -- how they develop over time. Such serials tend to work better than plot-driven ones.

Cliffhanger: The dramatic device of ending a chapter with a point of high drama. Derives from old adventure books and movies in which a sympathetic character must escape or be rescued from a precarious position. The idea is that readers will be compelled to return for the next chapter to find out how a crisis is resolved.

Editor's Note: This message informs the reader, usually on the first day of the
serial, that something special or different is about to happen. Newspaper readers are creatures of habit, and this note prepares them for developing the new habit of following the serial.

Engine: The big question that the story will answer for the reader. Will the patient survive the operation? Will the high school team win the state championship? Will the new product make its inventor a fortune?

Epilogue: Readers become involved in the lives of the characters, They want to know what happens to them after the arc of the story has been completed. This can be accomplished in a short narrative chapter, or in a simple list of the characters and what has become of them.

Flashback: The technique of moving the narrative from the present into the past. This can be done as a brief departure from the main narrative, or the whole story can be shifted from one scene to an earlier scene from which the remaining narrative flows.

Foreshadowing: Any story element that clues in the reader, boldly or subtly, that something significant or dangerous or climactic is down the road. A soldier places a sweetheart's photo in his wallet as he goes off to war. At the end of the story we discover that it's still in his wallet after 40 years.

Golden Source: A rich fountain of information that allows the writer to create the scenes necessary to make a serial narrative work. Usually this is one person, or a small group of people, willing to sacrifice privacy. But it can also be a trial transcript, diary or other written record.

Immersive Reporting: Long-term, hang-around reporting that puts the reporter in a position to become an unobtrusive eyewitness to scenes that will be important in the serial narrative.

Method Block: A block of type that describes the methodology of reporting and producing the story. This helps give the story authority, integrity and transparency, and may help minimize the internal attribution that can often clog a narrative.

Payoff: An ending that rewards the reader for sticking with a long project. It does not have to be "happy," but must offer satisfaction that the reading effort was worth it.

Prologue: Often the prologue of a serial narrative can serve as the lead. It can summarize the story, offer a preview of coming attractions, or highlight a key
scene from the middle of the narrative. It can go on a section front when the first
chapter is being played inside.

Reconstruction: The method used to create for readers scenes to which the reporter was not an eyewitness. At times, the reporter must depend on the memory of a single source. It is always best to test those memories with multiple sources and other records.

Saga: A narrative with long chapters, in which the chapters require as much as an hour of reading. While readers seem as willing as ever to tackle comprehensive narratives in books, many editors and commentators argue that the newspaper is no longer the place for them. This new orthodoxy deserves its skeptics, but I cannot deny my own reluctance to attach myself to newspaper stories that require hours of reading.

Serial: A narrative with shorter chapters than the saga, sometimes much shorter.

Series: Any set of newspaper stories that runs more than a single day on the same topic. Series are likely to contain sidebars to the main story. The serial and saga are not.

Signature Photo: A photo or illustration used as a continuing emblem for the story. Usually run large on the first day, it can be used as an icon to tease, remind, update or promote.

Story So Far: The paragraph that summarizes the story before the latest chapter. Set apart typographically, it can be run daily or weekly, depending upon the length of the serial.

Tomorrow: A sentence that previews tomorrow's chapter.

So there you have it, a six-part serial starter kit to help you report, write and produce your first serial narrative -- or an even better second one. I will continue, with time permitting, to offer free telephone consultation to any reporter or editor working on a serial narrative. You can contact me, Roy Peter Clark, at rclark@poynter.org. Or telephone me at (727) 821-9494. Now get writing!


Read More In This Series:
Tools: Print, e-mail, Permalink, Comment On This Article, Share
Username
Password
New User? Signup Now
Poynter Careers