Here is a neat little trick I have
employed all my life in resolving problems, in realizing goals, and finally as
a tool for crafting fiction. I call it reverse plotting but it is in effect the
act of thinking backwards to arrive at solutions.
I can best
illustrate its power by showing you how I used it to create the basic storyline
for my first novella
Id always wanted to have a crack at
writing a murder mystery and in line with my policy of sticking to scenarios
with which I am familiar I used the theatre as the setting for Beginners
Please: Murder.
Now there is a world of difference between wanting to
craft a mystery story and actually accomplishing it. I could have of course
gone the route of pulling down a ready-made plot from the internet (there are
hundreds freely available for download) but I wasnt looking for an easy
solution; I was determined to devise my own original outline.
All I
had going for me when I started out was the concept of a repertory company
based in a creaky old theatre in North Yorkshire during the late 1940s. The
actor/manager is brutally murdered and the police narrow their suspects down to
the youngest cast member. He is arrested on suspicion of homicide but one of
the senior players in the company is convinced that the police have got it
wrong and she sets out to prove her colleagues innocence.
Seems
straightforward but how would I get from A to Z first time out of the
trap on writing a murder mystery?
Here is what I did using my little
exercise in inverted thinking
1. I started by turning the
situation on its head;
2. I looked first at the conclusion; suspect
cleared, murderer revealed;
3. Then I worked backwards on all I had to do
to arrive at this outcome;
4. I inverted my thinking by listing the events
in reverse order; last through to first.
Inverted thinking
Twist in the tale reveals the real murderer
Suspect is
released
Police reluctantly conclude that new findings are of sound
judgement
Trail of deceit discovered in pursuit of the truth
Leading actress disagrees with decision and instigates her own
enquiries
Police make an arrest
Evidence discovered
linking youngest cast member to the crime
Police interview cast
members and compile list of suspects
Actor/manager found stabbed to
death in back stalls
Dissention rife among cast over maltreatment
His vilification of the cast intensifies
Actor/manager
humiliates certain cast members at first reading of play
New
alliances are formed
Old friendships are rekindled
Provincial repertory company converges on theatre for opening of winter season
Now by turning these events on their head I have a storyline to make
my outcome materialize
1. Provincial repertory company converges
on theatre for opening of winter season;
2. Old friendships are rekindled;
3. New alliances are formed;
4. Actor/manager humiliates certain cast
members at first reading of play;
5. His vilification of the cast
intensifies;
6. Dissention rife among cast over maltreatment;
7.
Actor/manager found stabbed to death in back stalls;
8. Police interview
cast members and compile list of suspects;
9. Evidence discovered linking
youngest cast member to the crime;
10. Police make an arrest;
11.
Leading actress disagrees with decision and instigates her own enquiries;
12. She unravels a trail of deceit in her pursuit of the truth;
13.
Police reluctantly conclude that her findings are of sound judgement;
14.
Suspect is released;
15. Twist in the tale reveals the real murderer.
How inverted thinking works
It forces your brain to think
outside the box and stimulates action by focusing your thoughts on the outcome
before tackling the daunting task of providing a solution. Moreover, doing it
this way in reverse order prompts the thought process to add to the list as you
progress; much more easily in fact than producing the events in
conventional sequence.
It works in other ways too.
I used
inverted thinking to help me craft my first murder mystery but it works equally
well when applied to any fictional storyline.
ABOUT THE
AUTHOR
JIM GREEN is a bestselling author with a string of fiction and
niche non-fiction titles. To learn a host of other inventive ways to boost your
creative writing output, visit
http://ultimate-creative-writing-course.com




