Week of July 23, 2012—Common Problems in
Picture Book Manuscripts
Monday, July 24—A Problem with the
Problem
A
problem is the conflict in the story. The conflict is what compels the main
character to move through the story from beginning to end. Without conflict,
the characters don’t have a reason to do anything, to go anywhere, or (above
all) to try to change anything.
A
lot of us picture book writers fight against having a problem in our stories. “Can’t
a bunny just hop through the woods and enjoy his day?” Well, yes, of course a
bunny can do that, but will anyone care? If, however, the bunny is Peter Rabbit
and he is in Mr. McGregor’s garden and about to get whacked with a hoe (after
Mother told him not to go there in the first place), the reader definitely
cares about what is happening. That is how a problem changes a ho-hum story
into a work of fiction.
My first real ah-hah about problems and conflicts came when I heard Linda Arms White and Laura Backas talk about the three-act story structure used in television shows. Think of any of your favorite shows when you were growing up:
My first real ah-hah about problems and conflicts came when I heard Linda Arms White and Laura Backas talk about the three-act story structure used in television shows. Think of any of your favorite shows when you were growing up:
Bonanza Lassie The
Partridge Family
The
Munsters Mork
and Mindy Laverne and Shirley
The
Facts of Life Alice The Cosby Show
Three’s
Company Gilligan’s Island Happy
Days
Frasier I Love Lucy Cheers
Every
time we tuned into our favorite program, we found the characters we loved with
a new problem to solve. Lucy had spent
too much money, baked bread that caused the over to explode, worked in a chocolate
factory, stomped grapes, tanked up on too much Vitameatavegamin.
Think
about your favorite Saturday morning cartoons . . .
Josie
and the Pussy Cats Fat Albert Roadrunner
The
Tasmanian Devil Scooby Doo Johnny
Quest
The
Flintstones Elmer Fudd Foghorn
Leghorn
Transformers Dexter’s Lab Johnny
Bravo
Teenage
Mutant Ninja Turtles Thundercats Bugs Bunny
Every
Saturday, a new episode would introduce a new problem. I mean how many times would
it take that Coyote to figure out he wasn’t going to catch Roadrunner? Of
course, Velma and the kids happened to stumble into a new mystery each week. If Fred and Barney
didn’t do something stupid to get themselves into some kind of trouble that they had
to get out of, would the show have been funny at all?
Later,
when I started learning about Freytag’s Pyramid, rising action, falling action,
and the like, my understanding of trouble and conflict expanded. Soon I started
to realize that nearly every picture book had a problem. Look at any Caldecott
Award Winning book. Of course, the books on the list won their award for the
art, not the story, but you can still find the problems in each one . . . from Make Way for Ducklings to this year’s
wordless book A Ball for Daisy to Where the Wild Things Are.
The
problem in a picture book can be:
R
Funny
R
Serious
R
Weird
R
Common
R
Odd
R
Universal
R
Unique
R
Tried-and-true
The
problem in a picture book must be:
R
Something kids care about
R
Something kids relate to
If
you’re still fighting against problems in your picture book manuscripts, you
may soon find that your problems with your picture book manuscripts go away when
you have a solid problem for each picture book manuscript!
It’s Your Turn:
u Gather
up a stack of picture books and find the problem in each one.
v Look
at your latest picture manuscripts. What is the problem in each?
w Click
on the link above and visit the Picture This! Directory to discover more posts
about problems, three-act structure, and Freytag’s Pyramid.
2 comments:
Nice explanation of the age old storyteller's dilemma...
Thanks, Nancy!
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