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6.2.1: Exercise- Brainstorming a Narrative Essay

  • Page ID
    315278
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    1. What is/are experience(s) from my past that have changed my way of thinking about my life, people in my life, the place where I live, another part of the country or of the world, etc.?
    2. What is a story about something from my life that I tell often, but I tell it differently depending on who my audience is? (Be sure to spend some time thinking about why you tell it in these different ways; that could provide a clue as to why this story is so important to you.)

    What about what it’s about

    While most traditional short stories don’t have a thesis statement, shorter, more academic narratives will usually benefit from having some clarifying statement near the beginning of the story. Again, consider purpose: why are you telling the story? What overall idea are you trying to communicate to your reader? Be careful not to confuse focus and topic. Your topic is what your story is about—winning the big game, passing a test, surviving a car wreck, the death of a loved one. Your focus is what you are saying about your topic—what it’s about: never quitting, not giving up, or persevering when you didn’t think you could go on. Even vague hints at where the story is going can be valuable: “I was never the same after that night”; “I was 12 years old when my life changed forever”; “I never knew what I was capable of until the death of my best friend.” Not only do statements like these draw your reader in, they help to communicate where your story is going.


    This page titled 6.2.1: Exercise- Brainstorming a Narrative Essay is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Mindy Trenary.