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Ch. 71 | Defining Your Book's Premise, Logline, and Elevator Pitch
The Word Weaver Podcast
English - November 17, 2021 11:00 - 20.5 MB - ★★★★★ - 5 ratingsBooks Arts Society & Culture Personal Journals Homepage Download Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed
Today’s chapter of the #WordWeaverPodcast is short and sweet, but imperative for a great story. Learning how to write a book premise, logline, and define your book’s elevator pitch is the first step to writing a book. The second step is structuring, outlining, and plotting — but first, you need to understand your book’s central idea/theme, what drives the plot. Typically, a premise needs to contain 3 things in a single sentence:
A protagonist
A goal (what does your protagonist want or need?)
A situation or crisis (the protagonist is facing)
You should be able to define what your story is about, why readers should care, and be able to complete this sentence:
[Character] must [do something] to [story goal] or else [disaster/crisis situation/reason why the audience should care].
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