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Author: Jessica Ruprecht

How to make a story memorable

Disclaimer: This post contains Amazon affiliate links. I make a (very) small referral commission for any purchases made using my links. 

I’ve recently finished reading Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die by Chip and Dan Heath, and while the book may not be targeted at fiction writers, I think it’s got a lot to tell us about what it means to write a great story. Because the stories we love best are the ones that capture our attention and remain vividly imprinted on our memories, i.e. the stories that stick.

So, let’s  take a look at how to turn an understanding of sticky ideas into practical tips for how to make your writing memorable.

First, what makes an idea sticky?

The authors of the book break down the steps for stickiness into a cute acronym: SUCCESs, which stands for simplicity, unexpectedness, concreteness, credibility, emotions, and stories. Many of these concepts seem reasonably intuitive: keep your message concise, try to surprise your reader to keep them engaged, use concrete language rather than academic, abstract language, make sure your idea is presented in a way that fosters credibility, speak to the reader’s emotions, and, if you can, utilize story to achieve these ends. Stated simply, I don’t think most readers will find these ideas very surprising; however, the book does present some interesting strategies for achieving sticky ideas (and some interesting explanations for why we’re not naturally better at framing our ideas in a way that makes them memorable).

Let’s look at how to make a story memorable using these principles

Here’s my takeaway for writing a memorable story after reading Made to Stick.

Simplicity

  • Figure out what’s at the very heart of your story. What is the most important thing for the reader to walk away with?
  • Don’t get sucked down the rabbit hole of convoluted plots. Subplots are fine, but make sure they serve the core of your story rather than distracting and confusing your reader. No one likes to read a book they have to struggle to keep up with.
  • While avoiding over-explaining, don’t be afraid to spell things out for your reader. No one likes feeling that the author is toying with them and withholding information.

Unexpectedness

  • The easiest way to achieve Unexpectedness is to surprise your reader: break a pattern, upset their worldview, make them think “No, wait…”. In a story this could mean a crazy plot twist, but be careful of coming across as gimmicky (this damages the story’s Credibility).
  • There’s a reason everyone loves a good mystery novel. They’re frequently unexpected and keep us guessing and dying to know how it ends. As writers we can leverage this across genres: keep your reader guessing, make them doubt or dread the ending they foresee.

Concreteness

  • Use concrete details in your description (this is the old adage of show, don’t tell). Concreteness aids in ease of understanding and retention for readers. In non-fiction writing, try to steer clear of abstract language and ideas unless your audience is limited to experts in their particular field.
  • Make the characters’ world and experiences tangible.
  • For non-fiction writers. Avoid the trap of facts and statistics. Instead, illuminate principles with concrete examples (in story form!).
  • If you must use numbers, try to reframe your statistics in a way that makes them human-scale. We struggle to conceptualize 10^5 water drops, but can easily comprehend the notion of a gallon of water.

Credibility

  • Don’t make the reader suspend disbelief. If you’ve ever given up on bad sci-fi, you know what I mean. Instead, build a world that’s internally consistent and operates within well-defined, concrete, and logical boundaries.
  • You can use authorities and anti-authorities even in fiction (an anti-authority is a non-expert who has credibility on a subject due to personal experience, think Jared from those Subway ads). In fiction, authority comes internally from other characters, whose reactions lend credibility to your protagonists ideas and actions.

Emotions

  • Sticky stories play to our emotions. We love the characters, we hate them, we dread the messy end we expect for them, and we rejoice when they are saved at the last possible second. We care.
  • Avoid tried and trite language. Some words, phrases, and ideas have become so over-used they’ve lost their emotional mojo.
  • Appeal to identity. As humans, we view our thoughts and actions through the lense of our own self-image. Make sure your character’s actions are consistent with their identity.

Now, let me know what you think.

Do you agree with Chip and Dan Heath about what makes a idea sticky? Do you like this as a framework for identifying features that make a story memorable? Do you have any tips for writing sticky stories? Let me know in the comments below!

An infinity of waiting

She stands in the crowd—
solitary and silent,
an island — all her own.
The people flow, surround her 
on the sidewalk, bumping past her 
as they go.

She's been standing here a long time,
her edges worn smooth by the people
who brush past.

She no longer remembers stopping
No longer remembers anything
but an infinity of waiting, 
and a stationary salute
she can't recall beginning.

The people pass by and she watches,
doesn't understand their hurry,
can't share their urgency.

Her peace has grown roots,
right down through crumbling concrete—
down into the damp earth that lingers below.

She stretches, reaching long arms
up for the sun. She turns her eyes
from the crowds, and smiles 
toward the blue of the sky,

She hears only the breezes and sighs.

June 2014 Book Reviews

Welcome to the first of my monthly book reviews! For those of you who don’t know me, I read. A. Lot. My natural inclination is aided and abetted by a large number of hours spent commuting on the bus, which means I make it through a substantial number of books each month (I’ve read 30 so far this year). I love to talk about what I’m reading and I’m excited to bring this conversation to my blog so, without further ado, here are this month’s books.

Disclaimer: This post contains Amazon affiliate links. I make a (very) small referral commission for any purchases made using my links. 

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[/one_half][one_half_last]And the Mountains Echoed is a book that I enjoyed largely for the structure of the narrative. It’s a great example of a book that skillfully explores the ways in which human stories connect, across generations, decades, and continents. Because of its expansive timeline, the book has the opportunity to investigate how our pasts, our histories shape us, measuring the ripple-effect on human lives of choices made generations ago. I really liked this one, folks.
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[/one_half][one_half_last]Far and away the best book I read this month, The Orphan Master’s Son is a Pulitzer Prize winning novel about a North Korean man named Pak Jun Do, an orphan who grows up to lead an extremely improbable life. Both stunning and at times viscerally horrifying, the novel is a haunting and artful portrayal of a country and a culture so far removed from my own experience I find it hard to imagine. This was a fantastic book and I highly recommend it.
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[one_half_last]After reading and adoring Brene Brown’s most recent book,
Daring Greatly. I was eager to get my hands on her previous book, The Gifts of Imperfection. Unfortunately, I suspect I should have read them in the reverse order, since much of the material is similar between the two books. Of the two, I’d say read Daring Greatly and maybe don’t bother with The Gifts of Imperfection unless you’re really looking for actionable strategies and more concrete direction on how to implement the ideas from Daring Greatly in your own life.[/one_half_last]

 

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[/one_half][one_half_last]I’m definitely more than a little late to the party on this one, but I picked this up from the library last week and wound up devouring it in less than a day. Great literature The Fault in Our Stars is not, but enjoyable YA fiction it most certainly is. With interesting characters and a somewhat more literary bent than most YA fiction, this is a story that I definitely enjoyed. Fair warning though: the end made me cry.[/one_half_last]

 

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[/one_half][one_half_last]This is the one I tried but didn’t finish. I wanted to like it; The Flamethrowers was a National Book Award finalist, and I can’t quibble with the quality of the writing itself, but I just couldn’t get into it. I didn’t find any of the characters to be particularly compelling or relatable, and the story meanders through different places and points in time without any real sense of direction. Whereas And the Mountains Echoed was a brilliant example of how stories can be connected and woven across time and place, The Flamethrowers falls flat. I do, however, have to give a shout out to Rachel Kushner’s prose, because there are moments of brilliance in the book— just not enough to keep my interest.

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Have you read any of these? Got a great book recommendation for my reading list? Let me know in the comments below!

Tired of waiting for my monthly wrap-ups? I talk about what I’m reading each week in my email newsletter.

On a totally normal day at 6:27 o’clock

There’s a moment in the evening when the light slips between the city’s high-rises and side-streets at just the right angle.

A moment in the early summer when a gold/pink blush of lingering heat glitters with pollen from trees still so recently turned green— not yet browned and burnished by the summer’s (f)ire.

It’s a moment when time stops.

A moment when the world freezes to the pavement in a crystalline instant of gilded glory.

It’s the moment that captures you forever and is gone before you’ve known it, slipping past one second’s tick and into another’s tock.

It’s the moment when you feel the eye of the universe resting, just this once, upon a totally normal city block, on a totally normal day, at 6:27 o’clock.

Waiting for perfection

I'm waiting for my moment
muscles coiled, knees bent.
Soon it will be my time
No longer biding —ready—
Muscles tensing —eager—
to explode from the floor.

They say practice makes perfect so
here I stand — perfecting my stance
waiting for some sign
of my higher power.

Waiting to be sure that this,
this time will be the one.
My best yet.
Higher, faster, farther —

Maybe this time I'll reach perfection.