The story, the plot and the police

By Rosina Lippi  |  February 26, 2009  | 

Plot Month continues on WU.  Enjoy!
The distinction between story and plot is a deceptively simple one.

Story: what happened

Plot: the artful rearrangement of what happened in a way that keeps your readers engaged.

A police report is a story told as a series of facts, in chronological order:

August 29 2008. At approximately 10:16am Officer Rodriquez and I were dispatched to the site of an accident on northbound State Route 12, approximately 500 yards north of Exit 15. Witness J.M. Corrigan had called 911 and was still at the site with his passenger, Maria Corrigan, of Tyler. The witness stated he had been travelling behind a 2004 Ford Explorer when that vehicle suddenly veered sharply to the right, left the highway, broke through the guardrail, hit the cement barrier, flipped end-over-end and then plunged over the precipice falling approximately 200 feet. While the witnesses did not see the impact, they heard it clearly.

Witness JMC stated he had been travelling at about 70 mph, as was the accident vehicle. On examination and photographing of the scene we discovered no skid marks. Witnesses JMC and MC both stated unequivocally that the vehicle’s brakelights never flashed.

Multiple fire departments were at the impact site at the bottom of the cliff. The fire had been put out by the time we reached them. Two victims released to the coroner at approximately 11:45 am. No identifying documents survived the fire. The wreckage is still being processed. The case has been handed over to Detective Ann Uribe.

These are the facts, and they are singularly unsatisfying. Was this a mechanical malfunction, or something more sinister? Detective Uribe’s report will not directly address this questions. It will simply provide more facts and raise further questions.

The victims have been identified as Georgia Jackson, age 34 and her daughter Milly, age 3.

Forensics report no immediate evidence of mechanical failure. Preliminary findings from the coroner indicate no alcohol or drugs in the driver’s system. The mother’s driving record was clean. No criminal history. No history of psychiatric illness. The driver was a pediatric nurse at Stanley Memory Hospital. No overt hostilities with coworkers.

Married to Robert Jackson, a pediatrician. The marriage was, by all reports, a functional one without conflict or financial difficulties. One son survives, James, aged six.

Robert Jackson has no document history of drug abuse or any other compulsive behavior.  Both father and son were visiting with Robert Jackson’s sister Rayanne and her family in Springfield, and had been there for three days at the time of the accident.

Six weeks ago Milly Jackson was diagnosed with Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia. According to the doctor treating her, she was responding well to treatment and her prognosis was very good. Interviews with family members, coworkers and friends indicate that there were no overt suicidal gestures. We have been unable to contact the driver’s mother, who is traveling in South America. An interview with her might provide more insight into her daughter’s state of mind.

There are some strong indications here of what might have happened, but we only have part of the story. And still, the facts you do have, the things you know add up to something that won’t let go. You want to know what happened, and why Georgia and her daughter died.

Every novelist will approach this differently, but here’s a method that has worked well for me in the past. My experience is that old-fashioned index cards are the best way to proceed. On each card I enter one fact about Georgia’s life based on what I know already. I lay out the cards in chronological order, and consider. What other events in Georgia’s life are important? As I work, facts and scenes, bits of dialog come to me. Each goes on a card, until I have a chronological accounting of major facts in her life:

1. Georgia Adams is born into a middle class family in a small town.

2. When she is three, her younger brother Michael is born.

3. In grade school she is praised for her meticulous, careful ways.

4. At age seven, her brother dies of leukemia.

5. She gets through high school and nursing school, still careful and thorough in all her work.

6. As a pediatric nurse she is fiercely protective of her charges, who love her. However, she never manages to make a connection to parents.

7. She marries a pediatrician she works with, someone she admires for his skill and perceptive way with children.

8. They have two kids, a boy named James and three years later, a daughter they call Milly.

9. At age three, Milly is diagnosed with leukemia.

10. On a cold February morning, Emma takes her daughter to the hospital for a chemotherapy treatment and everything goes as expected.

11. On the way home, Georgia purposefully drives the car off a cliff.

Now you’ve got something – but it’s still only in its infant stages. We know the facts, but it’s all very clinical. We don’t have a plot. This is where you start shuffling your index cards, because the truth is, you could start telling this story anywhere. As the characters take on form, possibilities suggest themselves:

Card #6: start with a scene in which Georgia is being peppered with questions by the oblivious and disruptive parents of a sick kid, and she comes close to losing her temper – but doesn’t. She never does.

Card #11: Officer Rodriquez tells his mother the story of the accident. He’s only been on the job for three months, and he’s finding it difficult to cope with such a tragedy.

Card #3: Georgia wins a city-wide spelling be because she is the only fifth grader who can spell intravenous. Her mother is traveling for work at the time; her father forgets.

Card #11: We experience the funeral from Paul’s perspective, or his father’s.

Card #7: From Georgia’s own POV we walk through the house she and her husband are thinking of buying when they are newly married. In her mind she keeps comparing it to her childhood home.

Card #11: Detective Uribe interviews Georgia’s husband Paul.

There are dozens and dozens of possible starting points. Any of them could work, but only one will work best for you.

You’re wondering why you can’t tell the story from beginning to end. Of course you could do that, but most authors can’t afford to take the chance. You’ve got maybe two pages to hook your reader. You might be able to do that with beautiful prose about Georgia’s childhood home, her mother’s diffidence about having children, the stunted apple tree outside the kitchen window. There is one genre that values prose and imagery and characterization above plot. If you’re hoping to catch the interest of the lit-criterati, that stunted apple tree might be the perfect place to start.

On the other hand, most readers don’t think of plot as a four letter word. They don’t think of it as a word at all. They want a compelling story, and a reason to turn the page. The trick is, finding that starting point.

The index card approach works well for me, because it makes me really think. Once I find the right place to start, I may never refer to my index cards again. Or if I do, I might see how the story evolved in a different direction than I had anticipated.

Best of all, it gives me a way to watch Georgia grow up and turn into the woman who drives over that cliff with her three year old daughter strapped into her car seat. Because I understand how she got there, I can, if I do my job right, make you see it too.

Image by kimmi-baby.

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10 Comments

  1. Therese Walsh on February 26, 2009 at 8:43 am

    I really like this approach; it’s an easy way to coax your muse out to play as you think through a critical component of your novel– where to begin it.

    Thanks for a great post, Rosina!



  2. thea on February 26, 2009 at 11:16 am

    yes, a great illustration of how you would plot out using the index card. thanks WU



  3. Kristan on February 26, 2009 at 11:35 am

    Great technique, thanks! Although it’s funny, I rather think of story vs. plot as the exact reverse of what you’ve described… (Plot = what happened, Story = artful presentation of plot.)



  4. Kathleen Bolton on February 26, 2009 at 1:43 pm

    At last. A way to organize the random jumbles that is the beginning of a story. I like how this method provides structure while allowing the story to shoot off in unknowable directions.

    Fantastic post, Rosina.



  5. Satima Flavell on February 26, 2009 at 4:40 pm

    Not only a neat plotting idea, but a good way to see who your other characters are and what needs to be set up when – and where. Thank you Rosina!



  6. Wanda on February 26, 2009 at 7:24 pm

    What a practical and insightful method. I’m not a writer, but techniques like this almost make me think there’s hope for me yet!



  7. Amy Sue Nathan on February 26, 2009 at 8:07 pm

    With all the software and products and gimmicks out there, I’ve recently reverted to index cards. How I love my index cards.

    I’ve always been fearful of flashbacks though – so while there are snippets of backstory woven throughout my WIP – I’m reluctant to start in one place and go backward.

    Is there medication for that? ;)



  8. Pam on February 27, 2009 at 8:43 am

    I’d never thought of plot and story this way before. It makes sense. When you say the police report raises a lot of questions, it makes me think of how people will comment on news stories sometimes. Especially where those who know the journalism world can see that the reporter simply heard or read a police report and created a news item from there. No investigative reporting completed, just a basic reporting of the facts as the police report states them. The comment section to the on-line news item inevitably asks all the questions people are dying to ask. To ask someone. It’s fascinating. And I wonder often if the reporter in question goes back to review the comment section (what human could stand not reading them?!) picking up on what “the people” or rather, those who bother commenting on a news item on-line, want answered.



  9. maggie on March 3, 2009 at 5:55 am

    Wow, I like this way of looking at things. it is methodical and just makes perfect sense! Thanks Rosina!



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