WRITE YOUR SYNOPSIS IN 7 EASY STEPS!

a winding dirt road over a stream, where children play
The winding path of writing your synopsis can be fun!

WHAT A SYNOPSIS IS NOT.

A synopsis in not a pitch. If you’re needing to send out a query email or a pitch to a publisher or producer, see my post on writing PITCHES HERE. In a pitch you cover genre, comparative titles, author information and give a one paragraph synopsis that gives the main action and themes of your story, but not the ending. 

SO WHAT IS A SYNOPSIS?

A synopsis is your entire story in a page, or two if you’re lucky. I can hear the screams from here! “What? How do I get my 80 000 word novel into one page. It’s impossible!”

Well yes, writing your whole book in a page IS impossible. But if you do a good job of writing your synopsis you can give your reader (a prospective agent, publisher or producer), a good idea of what you story is about and how the plot unfolds.

Your synopsis will introduce your main character/protagonist and their primary story goals; and also let us know who or what is opposing that goal. The body of your synopsis shows us how the battle between our hope that the protagonist will achieve their goal and our fear that they won’t and the worst will happen, plays out. For more on this see SUSPENSE = HOPE + FEAR. 

Your synopsis needs to include all major plot points, including the ending. Yes, even if there’s a twist you don’t want to give away.

Let’s get to it!

Writers at work!

STEP 1

Who is your main character?

Brainstorm your protagonist – what makes them stand out from the crowd? Harry Potter isn’t just a child wizard, he’s an orphaned child wizard whose parents were killed by Voldemort. In Jaws, Chief Brody isn’t just the police chief on the island, he feels responsible for the deaths on his watch, and he’s afraid of the water (important detail to include when he’s fighting a shark). 

Think of some contrasting adjectives to describe your character. In ‘Dear Madman’, my work in progress, the murderer is violent but vulnerable after a childhood of abuse in institutions. 

Write a sentence describing your protagonist. Remember to make them as interesting as possible. We want our characters to be a little MORE than us regular humans. A passionate but psychotic police officer is a lot more interesting than a lazy accountant.

STEP 2

What does your character want?

What is your character’s goal? Your primary character goal is established in your inciting incident – the unexpected event that sets the whole story in motion. 

In Harry Potter, Harry gets a letter inviting him to attend Hogwarts. In Jaws, a shark kills a swimmer at the same time as the holiday crowds arrive. In ‘Dear Madman’, the man is hired to work on the family farm. 

Brainstorm your character’s goals. You can do this on three levels:

Physical –  the material world (this is where the synopsis will mainly focus) 

Emotional – the world of love, romance, feelings

Spiritual – often, as in Harry Potter, this comes down to the battle between good and evil 

STEP 3

What opposes your main character’s goal? 

Who or what is stopping them get what they want? If you’ve written a romance, this may be a love rival, or societal or cultural issues, or even warring families (think Romeo and Juliet). It may be an antagonist like Voldemort or the shark in Jaws, or it may be the political or social setting of the story as in Hunger Games, or even the sea, if you’re writing a story about a lone sailor circumnavigating the world. Setting is important. See my article on setting HERE.

Identify the opposition to your main character’s goal and write it down.

STEP 4

What is at stake?

What’s the very worst thing that could happen if your character doesn’t achieve their goal?  Make it worse!

In Harry Potter, Voldemort will come to power and the world will be plunged into darkness. In Jaws, the shark will go on a human feeding frenzy and in Dear Madman, the man will murder the entire family in their beds.

Brainstorm what’s at stake.

You should already have all the answers within your story. If you’re having trouble coming up with answers to any of these questions, you may need to rethink before submitting. Write your synopsis then use it to ramp up the tension in your whole book/screenplay.

STEP 5

Write your logline/premise

Put STEPS 1, 2, 3 and 4 together to make your logline. For example: A police chief who’s afraid of the water and blames himself for the deaths on his watch, must hunt down and kill a giant shark before it kills again. Or: An orphaned child wizard must defeat the powerful warlock who killed his parents or the whole world will be plunged into darkness. 

Write your logline and use it to keep a tight focus in step 5.

STEP 5

Write down all your main plot points

Focusing on the primary goal of your character as identified in your logline, and the actions they take to achieve that goal, jot down all the major plot points in your book. Include other characters that play a significant role in the story, but don’t include subplots or other characters that don’t move the story goal forward.

If you’re not sure what I mean by plot points, think of all the key emotional turning points in your story.

Start with your inciting incident or hook. Then move onto what happens that makes it impossible not to take on the challenge, the plans your character makes, what happens to those plans, and a big unexpected event at the middle of your story – the midpoint – that makes everything worse. 

What actions does the antagonist take, or what events derail things? What’s the next big plan that fails and your character’s darkest moment? What gives them the determination to defeat the antagonist and achieve their goal? How do they change and grow? What’s the biggest plan and the big emotional moments in the climax? And then of course, what’s your ending.

Don’t worry if this takes pages, the next step will narrow it down.

STEP 6

Focus and finesse your list of plot points and write them in sentences. 

Remember to keep the focus in tight on your premise, and your protagonists attempts to achieve their main story goal. Start with your inciting incident and logline: Eg When a man-eating shark kills a young woman at the start of holiday season, a police chief who’s afraid of the water and blames himself for the death, must hunt down the shark before it kills again. Then move on through each of your significant plot turning points. 

Include your setting. This is vital for speculative fiction set in other worlds, or in any story where the setting impacts the action.

Cut, cut and cut again until you get as close to one page as you can. Then cut again.

Get yourself a cuppa and cut cut cut!

STEP 7

Inject your unique tone or voice

This is the trickiest part. If you’ve written a comedy, your synopsis needs to be funny. If you’ve written a thriller, the synopsis needs to keep us guessing. If you’ve written a romance, then the reader has to sigh and get dreamy. If you’ve written a literary novel your own unique voice needs to shine through.

Redraft your synopsis making sure it matches the tone and genre of your book.

Don’t despair the hardest part is done!

DONE!

Well not really, synopsis writing takes time. Be prepared to work on it for over a week, refining and finessing it. Show it to your writing buddies who know your story, but also to writing buddies who don’t. 

Have you shown enough of the storyline to hook them in? Does the story still make sense cut down to such a minimal outline? 

Does it feel dead on the page? Often they do – don’t worry – as long as your storyline has enough action, it will still work. You can try including a line or two of dialogue, especially if that’s one of your strengths.

Don’t give up. Yes, writing a synopsis is hard, but you’ve done hard things before. You’ve written a whole book!

Be proud of yourself!

I hope you’ll find these steps useful. Let me know how you go!

Lots of love

Edwina xx

DO YOU NEED A WRITING BUDDY?

Writing can be a lonely business but it needn’t be! The greatest joy of my writing life is connecting with other writers, through my workshops, editing and retreats, but even more so connecting with other writers who help me iron out the problems in my own work – my writing buddies!

Over the years I’ve had several different writing buddies and some that have lasted the whole long way. These writing friends hold a special corner of my heart. A unique trust develops as we share often deeply personal work and help each other figure out how to make the words sing, how to get the message across more clearly, or how to fix that awful character you just can’t figure out.

Photo by Q. Hu01b0ng Phu1ea1m on Pexels.com

Can’t see the forest for the trees?

When we’re writing, especially longer works, it can be hard to see whether the structure is working or if our characters are likeable for all the words in the way. We can’t see the forest of our book for the trees of our laboured-over words. This is where the eyes of another kind writer can help. Another writer can stand above our forest and show us the way through. They can say, “Hey, you’ve veered off to the left here, away from the main story, time to get back on track,” or “Hmmm, seems like you lost one of your characters after chapter 3,” or “Wow, your dialogue is great, but a lot of the time I don’t know which forest we’re in. You need more setting detail.” You get the gist.

Gay and I have been writing buddies for a while now (as well as retreat buddies).

Friends and Family?

We can show our writing to friends and family and they may say nice things… Marion’s partner famously said, “Jolly good,” about everything she wrote. Or they can say not so helpful things like, “Who’d want to read that?” like my ex once did. If your family member or friend is an avid reader or a writer themselves, then their feedback is useful and of course we want to keep them as our cheering squad, BUT if we want useful, applicable advice, it needs to come from someone on the same path – a fellow writer.

Enter the Writing Buddy

If you’re lucky you already belong to a writing group where members read and critique each other’s work. Keep these groups small, no more than five, or the feedback can become overwhelming. But really you just need one good writing friend who you can show work to when you’ve gone cross-eyed reviewing it on your own. That fresh pair of eyes to see what you’ve become blind to is invaluable, a treasure in fact.

For many years my writing buddy Helena and I exchanged manuscripts and helped each other polish them to publishable standard. My friend Marion was also invaluable. Now I belong to a writing group of five authors whose help is incredibly useful, even just doing short pieces. And I have wonderful feedback buddies in my international retreat cohost Kerstin Pilz and my other retreat friends. Every reader willing to give feedback is a valued gem, even if all they do is fix typos. But the very best writing buddies can see the big picture of what you’re trying to achieve and help you get there.

How do you find a writing buddy?

I met my first writing buddy, Marion, at a QLD Writer’s Centre Workshop – we caught the bus together and started a writing group as we chatted on the way home. Helena and I met as students doing the Mphil in Creative Writing at UQ. I met Vahida my lovely new writing buddy on a retreat at Varuna House. And now I have my writers group made up primarily of fellow writing tutors at UQ and my treasured retreaters, including the beautiful Gay whose new book is coming soon! Can’t wait!

So to find your writing buddy I recommend you go places you’ll meet other writers in real life. Online buddies are okay, you can get critiques from people on GoodReads and other online places like fan fiction sites, or through Facebook groups. Attend writing workshops, treat yourself to a retreat, connect with like-minded writers who have a trick or two up their sleeves and arrange to meet regularly to exchange work for feedback. Don’t be afraid to ask, “Hey, would you like to swap work for feedback sometime?”

Photo by Yaroslav Shuraev on Pexels.com

Why feedback matters

Of course you can continue blithely on your merry way alone, but feedback from a fellow writer will only improve your work and increase your chances of publication, or a wider readership. Feedback points out problems we may not have seen, but deep in our guts knew were there. Feedback shows us what our strong points are and where we may need a bit more practice. Feedback shows us that someone has read our work with attention to detail and cares enough to help us improve it. Feedback matters.

Have you got a writing buddy? Or a writing group? Do you swap work and compare notes on your writing? If not, why not? Start now!

If you’re still looking, then sign up for a few workshops or come along on a retreat and find your people, ask one or two of them if they’d like to share work for feedback, or make a writing group.

Writing buddies make writing more fun!

We all need friends in this crazy business full of rejection and criticism from strangers. Our books are our precious creations and beginning to show our work to trusted fellow writers toughens up our writerly skins to prepare us to share our writing with the world. Writing buddies cheer us on when we get a lucky break and help us drown our sorrows when a rejection hits hard. They encourage us to brush ourselves off and get back on the horse that threw us, sit back at the desk and start writing again. Besides, writers’ meetings can include food and wine and lots of laughter.

Have fun! Life is short, find a writing buddy to share your love of words today!

Lots of love

Edwina 🙂 xx