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229 of 254 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Truby's "THE ANATOMY OF STORY": A CLOSER LOOK,
By C. J. Singh (Berkeley, California, USA) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Anatomy of Story: 22 Steps to Becoming a Master Storyteller (Hardcover)
To date, all of the amazon reviews have praised this book uncritically. This review takes a closer look. Truby presents excellent analyses/anatomies of numerous films and literary works. The book also includes repackaged story-writing techniques; the repackaging, however, seems forced and cumbersome. Many other widely read books, examples listed below, explain these techniques much more lucidly.
On page 5: "My goal is to explain how a great story works, along with the techniques needed to create one.... I'm going to lay out a practical poetics for story-tellers that works whether you're writing a screenplay, a novel, a play, a teleplay, or a short story." Promising. Truby goes on to present engaging analyses of films and literary works: films like "Citizen Kane," "Cinema Paradiso," "Shawshank Redemption," "Hannah and her Sisters," and "Lord of the Rings"; literary works like Charles Dickens's "A Christmas Carol," Emily Bronte's "The Wuthering Heights," Joseph Conrad's "Heart of Darkness," James Joyce's "Ulysses," and Mario Puzo's "The Godfather." However, the techniques Truby presents -- such as starting with a one-sentence premise, developing the story line from the premise, creating contrasting characters, weaving in the inside emotional story -- are also the techniques in Lajos Egri's clasic, THE ART OF DRAMATIC WRITING; Syd Field's pioneering book, SCREENPLAY; Linda Seger's MAKING A GOOD SCRIPT GREAT; David Trottier's THE SCREENWRITER'S BIBLE; Stanley Williams's THE MORAL PREMISE; Dara Marks's THE INSIDE STORY; and Robert J Ray's THE WEEKEND NOVELIST. Yet, none of these seven well-known contemporary writers of story craft and almost none other are referenced anywhere in Truby's 464-page book. On the opening page, Truby says: "Terms like 'rising action,' 'climax,' 'progressive complication,' and 'denouement,' terms that go as far back as Aristotle, are so broad and theoretical as to be almost meaningless." And on the next page, "The three-act structure is a mechanical device superimposed on the story and has nothing to do with its internal logic." (On page 287, Truby trashes the three-act structure as "lousy plot with no chance of competing in the real world of professional screenwriting.") In the above quotes, the phrases "almost meaningless," "nothing to do," "lousy plot" sound strident. And wrong. During drafting, structural guidelines do contribute -- contribute interactively -- form to content. Moreover, the classical three-act structure is invariably the audience's psychological experience of conflict in any dramatic story: beginning, middle, end -- even when plot-design presents the conflict in a different order. Truby, I think, meant to say that citing the three-act structure is not one of his 22 steps touted in the book's subtitle. Granted, simply citing the three-act form wouldn't be helpful. It reminds me of the king's unhelpful advice to the white rabbit in Lewis Carroll's wondrous tale: "Begin at the beginning," the king said, gravely, "go on to the end; then stop." However, none of the craft books listed above just cite the three-act form and then say as Truby imputes: "Got that? Great. Now go and write a professional script"(p 4). They discuss premise, theme, character, characterization, goal, conflict and so on. Truby slipped into the straw-man fallacy here. From the questions I asked the author at his reading this afternoon in a Berkeley bookstore, I learned that he also markets a writing software, Truby Blockbuster, upgraded to match this book. At home, I looked up the amazon software-reviews of Truby Blockbuster. The software is expensive: three-hundred bucks upfront plus hundreds more for add-ons. One of the four reviewers, Razzi--"the working screenwriter"--notes: "You have to take Truby's ideas with the knowledge that Truby himself was never able to successfully apply them. His sole pro credit is as a tv writer on a series made over a decade ago. But that doesn't stop Truby from pontificating on all the 'mistakes' made by writers far more successful than himself." Well, well, well. A craft teacher can be effective without being a high performer in the art. To be fair to Truby, let's remember that the poineering guru of drama-writing craft in European literature, Aristotle, did not write any drama at all. Craft books on writing can teach only the craft, not the art. The book's title is apt; the subtitle isn't. It's the brilliantly illuminating examples of craft as anatomies of numerous screenplays, novellas, novels that make this a five-star book, not its subtitle's touted 22-steps. -- C J Singh -------------------------------------------------------------- More details? Please read on. The book sequences chapters on "techniques of great storytelling in the same order that you construct your story." Nine of the ten chapters end with detailed exercisese book's nine exercises are: EXERCISE #1: CREATE YOUR PREMISE. Premise: State your story idea in a single sentence. (Lajos Egri, Syd Field, James Frey and others urged this as step one.) EXERCISE #2: USE the SEVEN KEY STEPS of STORY STRUCTURE. Weakness and need; Desire; Opponent; Plan; Battle; Self-Revelation; New Equilibrium. (These are repackaged concepts from Aristotle, concepts that Truby labelled as "almost meaningless.") EXERCISE #3: CREATE YOUR CHARACTERS. Create characters from your premise. EXERCISE #4: OUTLIINE THE MORAL ARGUMENT. Outline the moral argument or theme inherent in your premise. (Stanley Williams's "THE MORAL PREMISE" explains this better than Truby does.) EXERCISE #5: CREATE THE STORY WORLD. Create the story world "as an outgrowth of your hero." EXERCISE #6: CREATE A WEB OF SYMBOLS. "We'll figure out a web of symbols that highlight and communicate different aspects of the characters, the story world, and the plot." EXERCISE #7: CREATE YOUR PLOT. Create your plot by following the 22 steps of the book's subtitle. "The steps... provide the scaffolding you need" to create an organic story design. Truby presents persuasive analyses of "Casablanca," "Tootsie," and "The Godfather." Nonetheless, Truby's vaunted 22-step exercise will generate the three-act structure! EXERCISE #8: CREATE THE SCENE WEAVE. To prepare for writing scenes, first: "Come up with a list of every scene in the story, with all the plotlines and themes woven into a tapestry." Truby presents a useful brief example comparing scene weaves from an early and the final draft of "The Godfather" as well as fuller examples from "L.A. Confidential," "The Empire Strikes Back," and "It's a Wonderful Life." EXERCISE # 9: SCENE CONSTRUCTION AND SYMPHONIC DIALOGUE Construct "each scene so that it furthers the development of your hero. We'll write dialogue that doesn't just push the plot but has a symphonic quality, blending many instruments and levels at the same time." The chapter includes instructive brief examples from "The Seven Samurai," "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid" and a detailed example from "Casablanca." -- C J Singh
81 of 87 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This is not only a "how to book",
By
This review is from: The Anatomy of Story: 22 Steps to Becoming a Master Storyteller (Hardcover)
I'm French and it's not easy for me to say in english simply this book is very important for the history of narration.
It's not a basic book about the three-act structure. It's not a "how to book" with a little formula and a couple of advice without interest for a real writer. I'm a screenwriter in my country and I read a lot of books on writing - maybe hundred. Generally, it's always the same recipe again and again: A story has to have a beginning, a middle and an end; a main character with a goal, then plenty of obstacles in a middle, and a climax at the end, and so on. OK, and after that? You are in front of your blank page and... Nothing! Just theory! With this book it's very different. There are many techniques (real techniques, practical techniques) and a real point of view about what the narration should be in general. What's a story? How to write something clever - not only with "suspens", "mystery", or "action" - but with meaning! How to develop your theme, your values, your moral, through your story, step by step. How to write something with your voice, your unique voice, your emotion, your personality, and very important: your own structure!!! I don't know if John Truby is a "guru" or something. But I know John Truby is a great "essayist" on writing. John Truby knows his subject very well and you can feel it, page after page. All serious writers should read this book, a French is telling you. Good reading Marc Herpoux
60 of 64 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent for novelists,
By
This review is from: The Anatomy of Story: 22 Steps to Becoming a Master Storyteller (Hardcover)
This is easily one of my favorite writing books. Since other reviewers have taken this from a screenwriter's perpsective, I'm going to be different and come at from a novelist's.
So many books focus on fill-in-the-blank forms, checklists, and "hero's journey" archetypes (and its many variations), that you begin to feel like you're just spinning your wheels, piling up unconnected plot points and factoids about characters, but getting nowhere. It seems like you're doing all the right things, but somehow it's just not working. What makes this book effective is its true emphasis on 'story.' Truby makes a sound case against relying on the 3-act theater paradigm for structure, including questioning its value for novelists - and he makes a good case. Abandoning that constraint opens up far more plotting possiblities to fill 250 to 400 pages. He also uses a variety of examples, from popular films to classic novels. Not being the hugest of movie buffs, I found that helpful. His character-building gets away from the usual checklists and forms (those never really work for me), with a more organic, story role-based approach that makes you take a hard look at what significance each character has in your story, if the character's role needs revising to better fit that role, or even whether you need that character at all. The emphasis on story means there's nothing really on page counts or screenplay formats or selling to Hollywood, so there's more grist in here for the novelist. Even if you're an experienced, published novelist, this book will give you a new way of looking at your current project. I struggled haphazardly with a fiction project for over a year. This book helped me look at it in a new way so that I can finish it rather than abandon it. Now I feel it's getting back on track. "The Anatomy of Story" is a thick book, to be sure, but very readable, and it's a must-read.
22 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great Guide for Story Construction,
This review is from: The Anatomy of Story: 22 Steps to Becoming a Master Storyteller (Hardcover)
Back in the Dark Ages, when cassette tapes were all the rage in after-hours education, I took Truby's "Story Structure" course, which featured the 22-Step Story Structure Method. The 22-Step tapes were very helpful, but this book is far and away superior.
For one thing, the 22-Steps don't appear until Page 267. From Page 1, Truby presents loads of practical information, all useful and necessary in building solid stories (screenplays or novels). By the time you reach the 22-Steps, you'll be thinking like a pro because the text is lavishly documented with the titles of movies that illustrate the points he's teaching. While I am chiefly interested in writing exciting action novels for middle-graders, studying his recommended films is easier than hunting down novels that illustrate his objectives. For instance, to see the difference between Need and Desire, he illustrates the differences with "Saving Private Ryan," "The Full Monty," "The Verdict," and other films. John Truby also highlights Key Points in every section, for example: "Your Hero's true desire is what he wants in this story, not what he wants in life." My bookcase groans under a load of craft books on writing! You can save money and bookshelf space by buying this fine book by John Truby and reading it carefully.
9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Outsider,
This review is from: The Anatomy of Story: 22 Steps to Becoming a Master Storyteller (Paperback)
I have hundreds of writing books. I went to college to be a writer and got my degree, but my attempts at writing novels based on what I had learned proved to be lacking. The fact was, that in my experience, colleges only taught you how to read and interpret classic prose, and not how to tell stories. So, less than a year out of school, I embarked on a journey to educate myself. I have spent hundreds of dollars on book after book, attended seminars, and online blogs. Everyone seemed to be telling me that a story hinges on either character or plot. But this balancing act seemed unnatural to me. I knew that there was more.
I purchased this book on a recomendation from one of my former teachers because this was the book he had wanted to teach from instead of the "approved" one. This book changed my entire way of understanding the structure of a story. The story wasn't a balancing act between the various threads but simply the outgrowth of a single unifying theme. This concept is thrown around in many different books but simply forgotten after a few sentences. This book teaches the truth. You come up with a theme. Then you choose characters who embody that theme. Then a plot that personifies it. Then a setting. Then symbols. The list goes on. And when everything is tied to that thread, the reader is left with a story that stays with them for years to come. And that, I what I want as a writer. I would recommend this book to everyone who struggles to balance character and plot and is looking for a better way of weaving a story.
16 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
This book is the opposite of what it tries to be,
By Uogio (USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Anatomy of Story: 22 Steps to Becoming a Master Storyteller (Hardcover)
I bought Truby's book because it seemed to overflow with a terrific step-by-step system for crafting a great story. Well, after trying to get through the book a few times, I can tell you that it certainly does overflow, and there certainly is a step-by-step system, but ... there's really no way to craft a great story with the impenetrably complex system in this book. Truby bangs you over the head with the SUPER-IMPORTANT warning that if you don't do all of his steps in order (and correctly: he helpfully points out that "9 out of 10 writers FAIL at writing a good premise." Thanks.) BEFORE starting to write, than your story will eventually crumble into a hopeless mess. But it dawned on me about halfway through the book that the stories he analyzes are already finished! He's telling you to do the work of an expert analyzer on a story that hasn't even been written yet!! (And I should mention that one of his examples is the story of Moses - it cracks me up to imagine the person writing down the Exodus story going through these 22 steps first.)
I felt a great sense of relief by putting this book down. I found it to be pretentious, and worrying about all those cryptic steps was paralyzing.
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
For storytellers in all media,
By StoryPros.com (Hollywood, CA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Anatomy of Story: 22 Steps to Becoming a Master Storyteller (Paperback)
In this book John Truby presents us with a 400+ page distillation of his well-known screenwriting instruction, which lays out virtually everything you need to know to become a master storyteller. Not just a screenwriter...but a storyteller.
Truby's goal is to help you to write an organic movie that doesn't feel like something mechanically assembled from a list of first principles. To do this he walks you through all sorts of exercises designed basically to tease the story out of your logline and build it up naturally -- devising characters as natural expressions of the story, placing those characters in opposition via weakness, need and desire, and bringing the story to a climax that proceeds logically from all that's come before. The book's a great way to flesh out an idea -- before you know it, you'll have a web of characters, a designing principle and moral argument, landscapes and symbols which express what you're trying to achieve, and a plot which follows the 22 steps. The titular 22 steps are the 22 beats of the ideal movie plot. They are expanded from 7 more fundamental beats which chart the motion of any good story from beginning to end. It's a very useful paradigm, and will be enlightening to story neophytes and experts alike. [Excerpted from our full review at StoryPros.]
13 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Nuts and Bolts All Fit,
By Former "litteacher" (Newington, CT USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Anatomy of Story: 22 Steps to Becoming a Master Storyteller (Hardcover)
Truby's book treads the same ground as Robert McKee's STORY, but with less emphasis on aesthetics and theory and more attention to "what works." Truby gives concrete examples and solid explanation for every baby step of his process, and draws his examples from a few films that most people know or can easily rent (The Godfather, Tootsie, and Casablanca carry a large share of the load).
A review I read before purchasing the book made much of Truby's iconoclasm and his debunking of several cherished traditions such as "three-act structure." Well, yes, he questions them, but "debunking," attacking," and rejecting" are too harsh. He doesn't reject the idea(s) as much as offer expanded alternatives. The best part of Truby's approach is that every idea relates to every other one: character, plot, setting, dialogue, etc. This builds a strong unified script (or novel) and makes for characters and stories with consistent depth. His writing exercises take the reader through the whole process in short clear steps. He even points out potential problems. An excellent book for anyone who wants to write solid fiction.
15 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Helpful but not what it claims to be,
By HB "Sam" (NYC) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Anatomy of Story: 22 Steps to Becoming a Master Storyteller (Paperback)
I think this book is really interesting and helpful if you take it with a grain of salt and just read it and try to answer some of the big questions. For instance:
Do the main character and the opposition actually want the same thing? If so, what is it? How do subplots echo and enhance the main plot? There's a bunch of good questions in here that I had never really considered asking myself before. However, if you try to actually do EVERYTHING he says, you will go insane just trying to sort out exactly what it is he wants. The book is long and repetitive and not always entirely clear (mostly because I suspect he just started making stuff up at some level so that this would look original and he would seem like some kind of genius). As many people have pointed out, he hasn't really applied the stuff himself to any great acclaim. He's created a system of deconstructing a piece AFTER it was written, which is what writing gurus all do. That is not at all the same thing as showing someone how to write a piece before they write it. As such, it gives you things to think about, but it is not exactly what it claims to be. I would be much happier if he had just made a workbook with questions that I could follow and answer and thus be able to avoid wading through all the repetitive meandering.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
better than excellent,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Anatomy of Story: 22 Steps to Becoming a Master Storyteller (Paperback)
The Anatomy of Story is a 'how to' book which kept me awake all night reading. Aimed at screenwriters it also works as a manual for novelists because the author explains deep structure and how to get at it. He analyses films that were origonally great novels. Truby introduces us to the one line premise, the story in one sentence, the structure of story, the creation of believable characters who will drive the story, moral arguments, the use of symbol and archetypes.
So John Truby has not only inspired me to keep trying to write fiction, he has changed the way I read and the way I watch films. |
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The Anatomy of Story: 22 Steps to Becoming a Master Storyteller by John Truby (Paperback - October 14, 2008)
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