Writer's Digest

SUBPLOTS AREN’T SECONDARY

The interplay between your primary plot and subplots is crucial to your story’s success—and all plot elements need to come from ideas. As Joyce Carol Oates explained, “Before you can write a novel, you have to have a number of ideas that come together. One idea is not enough.” Don’t think of your subplots as afterthoughts. Since they play a major role in storytelling, they must be carefully envisioned and constructed.

Subplots provide support to the main story in the same way that scaffolding supports a building under construction. Taking an analytical approach to subplot development helps ensure your choices will be weighty and relevant enough to do their jobs. While subplots can add insight and depth to your stories, choosing them is complicated because they need to satisfy multiple purposes. They must simultaneously move the plot along, aid in character development, help control pacing, and contribute to an appropriate ending.

Ideally, you’ll choose two subplots. Fewer than that and you risk a story that’s overly linear and light. More than that and you risk

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Writer's Digest

Writer's Digest1 min read
Writer's Digest
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Amy Jones SENIOR EDITOR Robert Lee Brewer MANAGING EDITOR Moriah Richard EDITORS Sadie Dean Michael Woodson EDITORIAL INTERN Hannah Spicer ART DIRECTOR Wendy Dunning EDITORS-AT-LARGE Tyler Moss Jessica Strawser CONTRIBUTING EDITORS Ja
Writer's Digest2 min read
Characterizing Through Relationships
Today is her forty-fifth birthday. She finds it hard to believe. Once she’d been young and she’d thought forty-five would come slow and impossible. She’d thought forty-five would be another world. But it came fast and it’s not what she thought it wou
Writer's Digest4 min read
You Got The Offer—Should You Sign?
Congratulations! You’ve received an offer of representation from your Dream Agent. It’s the moment you’ve been waiting for. In the good ole’ days of threehour lunches and cocktails sharply at 5 p.m., many authors signed with their agents on a handsha

Related Books & Audiobooks