Develop a Short Story the Easiest Way Possible

Developing a short story and doing it well is plain out work. When most creative writers sit down to write a new story, they have no idea where to begin. Newbies lumber from one scene to the next, hoping for the best. Perhaps that's because there is no strict format on how to develop a story, but if you try the DeBowen Technique just once, you'll never write a story any other way. It's so easy that you can do these three steps in your mind and begin writing when your thoughts are in place.

Step one – begin by plunging directly into the story's climax scene and outlining it briefly. Answer one question – what is your story about? Once you have answered that question, you will know how many main characters you need, how many secondary characters you will have, and how long the story will be.

To demonstrate, let's say your story is about abuse. You might think of two abused children – a girl, age 9, and her brother, age 5. Now that you know what your story is about and who the two main characters are, write the middle scene – known as the conflict scene. Pick up in the middle of the action with an insane, knife-wielding stepfather chasing the children through the forest. (Remember – we're just writing a rough outline and we'll use it like a map.)

The children run until they are exhausted and finally take a short rest, but when they sit down and lean against a tree, they topple backwards into a tiny washed out place in the bank. It's the perfect hiding place.

The stepfather reaches that point also, and when he stops briefly, he is no more than three feet from where the children are hiding. Their hearts beat so hard they're afraid he can smell their fear.

That's all you need to know before you take your story to step two.

Step two: Now we know the conflict so it’s time to let the story find its natural ending by asking who, what, when, where, why, and how. For example, what will happen to the children? Where will they go? How will they escape?

The story could progress in a hundred different ways, but let's say the stepfather moves on. The children find a path to a village and they pant out their story to a kind shoe cobbler. The cobbler tells the townspeople a huge, fierce man is pursuing the children and he intends to kill them.

In the villager's eyes, there is no greater crime than abusing children. In such cases, they feel that ridding the earth of such vermin is commendable – and these are very commendable people. They snare the stepfather and hang him. The children go to live with the shoe cobbler and his wife. The end.

Did you notice how easily the plot resolved itself? It always will when you ask who, what, when, where, why, and how.

Step three: Now it's time to write the opening scene. It will be SO easy because obvious questions must be answered. Again, ask who, what, when, where, why and how to fill in the blanks.

Where did the children live? What happened to their mother? Why was the stepfather chasing them? Answer those questions and you have the beginning of the story. (And don't forget to make your first sentence a "hook" – a sentence that will grab the reader by the throat and compel him to keep reading.) All that remains is to connect the three scenes and fill in the details. Edit, and you're finished. (Oh, that it were so simple – but that's the bare bones structure.)

By outlining the action scene first (the conflict/plot), and then the ending (the resolution), you know you will have two main characters (oldest child and step-father). You know who the secondary characters are, and you know the length of the story, since it will take at least 2,000 words to develop that much drama and suspense.

This method is called the DeBowen Technique. Try it two times, and you'll never develop a story any other way.

Author's Bio: 

Deborah Owen is the CEO & Founder of Creative Writing Institute, found at http://www.creativewritinginstitute.com. Deborah says, "Every student in my school receives their own private tutor and they're available six days a week. No other school offers that kind of training, and since we're a non-profit organization, we under-price our competition. We even have a payment plan." For more great writing tips, see http://www.deborahowen.wordpress.com.