#303 in Reference books
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Reddit mentions of The Story Grid: What Good Editors Know
Sentiment score: 3
Reddit mentions: 4
We found 4 Reddit mentions of The Story Grid: What Good Editors Know. Here are the top ones.
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This is Shawn Coyne's Story Grid system, which he actually uses to edit stories. I highly recommend the book, which taught me a lot about writing and editing in general (and I'm pretty well learned in this area, having a degree in screenwriting). There's also a story grid podcast that's pretty interesting.
Link to the book: https://smile.amazon.com/Story-Grid-What-Good-Editors/dp/1936891352/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1536954605&sr=8-1&keywords=story+grid
Story by Robert McKee. This will show you The Matrix.
Story Grid by Shawn Coyne. This book will take your novel from vague concept to power-outline.
Also excellent is /r/Mistborn's lecture series, available for free on the Youtubes. It's aimed at fantasy and sci-fi writing but has plenty of relevance for any other genre.
I've had two successful self-pubbed novels with a third one coming soon and these are the resources that took me from scrub to author.
I completely agree. Have read it three times, and even made a page by page checklist as well as an act by act, and global checklist for my stories. It's kind of a Story Grid-esque thing but with more detail.
I'm writing screenplays so it's a plus for me :D. Have not heard of Swain's Techniques of the Selling Writer. I got John Gardener's The Art of Fiction but haven't gotten to it yet. Is it filled with a lot of practical information like McKee's book? Or does it talk more in a kind of abstract interpretive/theoretical style (as I know some books do)? I much more prefer practical terms/examples.
A couple of good books in the Robert McKee Universe are:
Dialogue which gets more into the micro level of storytelling, and Story Grid which is more macro. Shawn Coyne, the author of Storygrid and editor of Dialogue also has a podcast.