3 Steps to Find Your Book's Theme

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  • čas přidán 21. 06. 2024
  • ✅ Get our Scene Writing Checklist → storygrid.com/checklist?...
    Here are the 3 steps to develop your idea for a book into a story theme.
    This is Part 2 in my series on how I wrote my latest book, _The Shithead_.
    📹 Watch Next → • The 1 Thing All Great ...
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    My name is Tim Grahl, I'm the CEO of Story Grid and I'm the author _The Shithead_, _Running Down a Dream_, and _Your First 1000 Copies_. My partner Shawn Coyne is the creator and founder of Story Grid and he's a writer and editor with over 30 years of experience.
    🧰 Additional Resources
    • The 1 Thing All Great Stories Have in Common: • The 1 Thing All Great ...
    • How to Write a Well Rounded Story: • How to Write a Well-Ro...
    • Narrative Device: • Narrative Device: 3-Pa...
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Komentáře • 17

  • @drimeloca
    @drimeloca Před 6 dny +2

    Very insightful and generous of you to share 🎉 Thank you!

  • @yoshibros8904
    @yoshibros8904 Před 6 dny +3

    great video! It's so nice to listen to other authors' experiences. For me theme is something "behind" the actual text. In communicational theory of linguistics utterances are considered to be units that form based on thoughts, emotions and purposes. Implying that to literature works too: theme forms an image and image is used to tell a story

  • @markharris8617
    @markharris8617 Před 5 dny

    Very clear explanations, Tim. Thanks.

  • @Joerideabike
    @Joerideabike Před 6 dny +3

    Oops, too late, already having written 300k words without knowing my theme. Oops. Scenes just came to and I wrote them down as fast as I could with yellow pad and medium pointed pen, ha ha. But now, motivated by you I look at my splattered landscape and see that I DO have a theme, double-whatever, and a Main Character that I love, and even I don’t know what will happen. I hear this is common, right? 0:13

  • @PhoenixCrown
    @PhoenixCrown Před 4 dny

    Awesome job explaining the difference between preaching "the right way" and arguing what you believe readers should take away.

  • @robertrdbrooks7658
    @robertrdbrooks7658 Před 6 dny +4

    Not that misery likes company. However, it's good to know I wasn't the only one who went through that type of self discovery. From listening to your other videos you went through a soul searching (metamorphosis), to say the H word in a nice way. Very interested in your book. Unfortunately Tim, I made a lot of very bad people pleasing, external validating, yes person, nice guy decisions that landed me in a not so nice place. I didn't know the words. Never say yes when it's a no to yourself. Once, I, work, myself, out of this. For future reference your book is on my list. Very interested. Thank you for the education.
    👍💥

  • @wasthataflute
    @wasthataflute Před 4 dny

    Cheers. This locked in the two-factor problem for me. The Story Grid makes total sense. Everything falls into place. Can't imagine a better bed for letting stories blossom uniquely and compellingly.

  • @JimWeaving-ty6tr
    @JimWeaving-ty6tr Před 6 dny +2

    Thanks mate. You've helped me clarify my themes. Find a way to express them - because my weakness is in summarising, being concise, succinctly describing my ideas in a way others will understand. Rather than the way they fill my head as a general idea that only I understand. Which is my starting point for a story.
    One thing: How specific do you think you should get? Eg. The theme of gender dysphoria could fit under your 'being your true self' statement. So could 'hiding your emotions out of misplaced loyalty and fear'. What do you reckon?

  • @v.w.singer9638
    @v.w.singer9638 Před 4 dny

    My theme(s) is usually multi layered and boiling it down to one sentence simply wouldn't work. I usually just hold the themes in my head, the same way I would compose a photoshoot or digital artwork.

  • @katrina484
    @katrina484 Před 6 dny +2

    I'm currently brainstorming a new mystery book which I hope will be the first of an on-going series. I'm wondering about how to approach theme with an on-going series. Do I need a new theme for each book in the series or do I have just the one to carry through all books? Or perhaps something in between? I'd love to hear people's opinions.

    • @holly4523
      @holly4523 Před 6 dny +1

      I'm brainstorming a mystery series too, Katrina. And I've figured that there could be a theme overall in the series, such as a theme for a maturation worldview story, and each book could/should have its own theme for its specific plot regarding the crimes/criminals.
      *Ex: Series theme - Compassion is the first sign of civilization; humans need each other (Your protagonist could learn this over the course of the series). 1st book theme - You don't really know a person until you look at their reaction to emotional pain (the protagonist can learn this specific lesson, but not the overall lesson yet) etc...

    • @katrina484
      @katrina484 Před 6 dny

      @@holly4523 Thank you for your reply. You've given me much to think about.

    • @Joerideabike
      @Joerideabike Před 5 dny

      ⁠@@katrina484You people “brainstorming,”. I hope you are actually writing your ideas down, preferably on paper, yellow paper, black ink. Medium point pen.
      Even the stupid ideas; they’re the best. You want ideas that come beyond yourself, beyond comfortable. The ones you want to reject, don’t. Ok, throw them in the trash, but don’t empty the can until next month. Ok, stuff will start to ferment on the bottom of the can, but so will those discarded ideas.
      I’m not trying to be funny, it’s no fun digging through empty tuna fish cans . But that’s why you use yellow paper! A flash of yellow! There it is!!
      Dig, Dig.

    • @theapavlou3030
      @theapavlou3030 Před 5 dny

      I'm having this very issue as we speak. I've plotted all 3 books, #1 seems to be a confused dark gangland suspense, so crime. By the end I figured the main main character deserved a romance but there is no realisation of it til the end of book 2. The other character she's fallen in love with is a horrendous option. There are clear arcs through all 3 but there is no way of finishing each book without setting up the next one. They do all need a separate arc but not end on a cliffhanger unless you specify to your audience that it IS a cliffhanger

  • @captainnolan5062
    @captainnolan5062 Před 6 dny +1

    Interesting that your book is about being a jerk, and in Steve Martin's movie "The Jerk", his dog was named S**thead (which is the title of your book).

  • @Joerideabike
    @Joerideabike Před 6 dny

    Don’t get me wrong, I like your theme for your new book. Really. But when you summarize 14:53 it into one sentence using abstract, high generality words it makes it sound so boring. If I had to keep looking at that sentence , I would quit on chapter 3. Sorry. Here’s a suggestion: take that one-sentence theme and turn it into a something your main Character would say, something that moves you to keep writing, like “Screw it!!”
    Post it on the hood of your computer.
    Only you know what it means to you, how precious, how everything depends on those two words: to walk away from rules, expectations, to finally be yourself, and in the process you discover you have become more likable, and those you feared you would lose their respect? They respect you more. Well maybe, it’s your book. But for sure, breathing is easier, and sweeter too.
    So “screw it” becomes the theme and it will propel you to the last page of writing. It’s only for you, not something to blog about.
    Ok, Ok, you can write your theme sentence on another post-it: “True self-acceptance and inner peace …” and stick it to the other side of the computer. I know which one you will look at in the year it takes to write it.

    • @StoryGrid
      @StoryGrid  Před 5 dny +2

      Could you share the links to the books you’ve written this way? - Tim