Thursday, April 12, 2012

Plotto



So it has been some time since I posted, and for my few followers I apologize.  Regardless it has been an intense few weeks and a number of stories and other writing based concepts that I have come across.  One such is William Wallace Cook’s story plotting tool Plotto.  I was initially really mad to get this book, reason being my girlfriend’s aunt ordered the book for me without letting me know, so my first time seeing it I was seething at Amazon.  After realizing who it was from and what it was I became curious.  Barbara, my girlfriend’s aunt, explained that she had heard about it on NPR and it sounded interesting so she ordered it for me. 

I was not sure what to make of the book since it contains phrases almost out of an algebra textbook to help come up with themes for stories, character development, as well as fractions of statements that can be mixed and matched together to come up with an (semi-)original three-act story structure. 

This book is way too interesting to describe in a blog post and I recommend any writer who is even occasionally looking for inspiration to pick up this book, or at least leaf through it at your local bookshop and see what it is all about.  It has been described as the book that every author denies using, but has a copy on their desk. 

The brief history of this book is that Cook while writing around the turn of the century was a pulp novelist, meaning that he would pump out sixty novels a year in some years, (yes that is correct sixty, 60 novels) and Cook came up with a much larger volume to keep track of the stories and plotlines he had used.  After a long career he wrote Plotto, a condensed version of his own reference and marketed it to writers. 

This is an excellent reference and I feel guilty that I have not yet had a chance to use it; it does come with exercises to learn how to use it while at the same time help you develop a storyline or theme to flesh out on your own.  But rest assured I have thumbed and learned how to use the book and its crazy algebra like structure and I must say it couldn’t be more interesting, definitely worth checking out.      

1 comment:

  1. I think I heard that same NPR bit about this book! It sounds really interesting, I'll have to check it out.

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