Y09W33WR Stuck Together
Part 1
How to Write
A short story draws a reader into a character’s world and carries them through an experience that changes something. It is written for an audience who wants to be engaged and moved — not just informed. The tone is vivid and personal, making the reader feel present in the moment and curious about what comes next.
- Ideas & content: Give your character a clear situation and a problem or tension that matters. Include specific details rather than general descriptions, and make sure something genuinely changes by the end.
- Structure & cohesion: Move from orientation to complication to resolution. Use paragraph breaks to shift scenes or time, and connect moments with time words and action to keep the story moving forward.
- Voice & audience: Find a consistent narrative voice that brings the reader close to the character’s experience. Show feelings through actions and reactions — not just by stating them.
- Language choices: Choose strong verbs and sensory detail. Use dialogue to reveal character. Vary sentence length — shorter sentences create tension, longer ones build atmosphere.
- Conventions: New speaker, new line — every time. Use speech marks correctly. Keep your tense consistent throughout.
Common pitfalls: Starting too slowly with too much backstory — get into the situation quickly and let detail emerge naturally. Telling the reader how a character feels instead of showing it through what the character does.
Part 2
Your Task Plan for Today
Question: Write a story about what passes between them. You decide who they are, where they are stuck and what, if anything, shifts during the time they spend together. The story does not need to end with connection - it needs to be specific about what actually happens.
Stimulus: Two people are stuck somewhere together - physically, not metaphorically - and have nothing to do but talk. They would not normally have chosen each other’s company.
Task Analysis: This task asks you to write a story that is specific and honest about a character’s experience or choice. A strong response will focus on what the moment means to the character, not just what happens. Use specific detail and avoid explaining feelings — let them emerge through what the character does and notices.
Quick Plan
Before you write, plan:
- The character’s situation — what is happening?
- What the character wants or notices — the small specific thing that drives the story
- A specific moment or decision where something shifts
- The ending image or moment — what is the final detail that closes the story?
Setting & sensory detail
Ground the story in specific, sensory detail. What does the place look like, sound like, feel like? Concrete detail makes readers feel present in the moment rather than distant from it.
Character & want
Show what the character wants or cares about through their actions and choices, not by telling the reader. Even small, specific wants carry a story — wanting to say goodbye, wanting to be noticed, wanting to understand something.
Show, don’t tell
Avoid explaining what the character feels or thinks. Instead, show it through what they do, notice, say and avoid. Let readers feel the emotion through the specific detail of the character’s experience.
Tension & complexity
Let the moment sit with its difficulty rather than resolving too quickly. The most interesting stories live in the complexity of a moment — confusion, mixed feelings, things that do not have easy answers.
Ending technique
Close with a specific image, action or moment. The reader should feel the ending in that moment without being told what it means. A final detail often says more than explanation.
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