Glossary for creative writers

  • In the active voice, the subject always ‘does’ the action of the sentence

  • A part of a play – how playwrights, traditionally, break up the action of the work

  • Someone who helps writers sell their work to publishers, to then be made into books

  • A symbolic fictional narrative that conveys a meaning not explicitly set forth in the narrative

  • The repetition of usually initial consonant sounds in two or more neighbouring words or syllables (such as wild and  woolly,  threatening  throngs)

  • The person, group, force, or idea that opposes the interests of the protagonist (hero)

  • The central character in a story who does not have traditionally heroic qualities

  • A perfect or typical specimen or example

  • The repetition of vowel sounds in words that are close to each other in a sentence

  • A paragraph providing a quick and concise overview of the author and their writing

  • A story that tells what has led up to the main story or plot

  • Someone who reads a book manuscript with an eye towards providing feedback to the author

  • The life story of a person written by someone else

  • A short description of a book or film. (On hardback books, found on the front flap of the jacket; on paperback books found on the back cover)

  • A line under the title of a newspaper or magazine article giving the author’s name

  • The group of authors or works that a consensus of academics, historians and teachers recognise as worthy of study

  • Any of the separate parts into which a book or other piece of text is divided

  • A person in a novel, film or play

  • The changes a character goes through over the course of a story

  • The description of a character’s physical traits (how a character looks), point of view, personality, private thoughts, and actions

  • Light commercial fiction originally addressed to British women readers of the late 1990s and early 2000s

  • An overused expression that either has a general meaning or has lost it’s meaning over time

  • The most exciting and important part of a story, play, or movie that occurs usually at or near the end

  • The struggle between two opposing forces or ideas

  • Makes sure a piece of writing is accurate, clear and correct before the text is laid out on the page by the designer (formerly a typesetter)

  • A genre of writing that uses elements of creative writing to present a factual, true story (also termed narrative nonfiction)

  • A fictional narrative where a crime is committed, followed by an investigation conducted by a professional or amateur sleuth

  • The outcome, solution, unravelling, or clarification of a plot in a drama or story

  • A conversation between two or more people as a feature of a book, play, or film

  • The words that frame dialogue in a piece of writing, most commonly ‘said’

  • The framework that gives structure to a story, including exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, and resolution

  • Imagined worlds or societies where life is extremely bad because of deprivation or oppression or terror

  • Text appearing after the main body of the book

  • Final chapter at the end of the story, which often reveals what happened next or the fates of certain characters

  • Reveals background information about a main character, setting, event or other element of the narrative

  • The action that occurs immediately after the big climax has taken place and the action shifts towards resolution instead of escalation

  • Literature created from the imagination – non-factual

  • A completed manuscript that has not been edited

  • Uses the pronouns I, me, we and us, in order to tell a story from the narrator’s perspective

  • Takes the reader out of the present story and into an earlier time period

  • An extremely short story, generally no more than a few hundred words, also micro fiction

  • A character whose purpose is to accentuate or draw attention to the qualities of another character

  • Hints or clues to the reader about what will happen later on in the text

  • Text material appearing in a book before the main story

  • The classification and organisation of literary works into the following categories: poetry, drama, prose, fiction, and nonfiction

  • Someone who writes a book or article, etc. for another person to publish under his or her own name

  • The sole protagonist of a story; they are the main character and often have admirable qualities

  • A fictional plot that takes place in the setting of particular real historical events

  • Vivid description that appeals to a readers’ senses to create an image or idea in their head

  • An episode, plot point or event that hooks the reader into the story

  • Including a lot of unnecessary information in one big clump, detracting from the main action

  • Beginning a story ‘in the middle of things’

  • A person or character’s inner voice

  • Recording personal insights, reflections and questions on assigned or personal topics

  • A handwritten or typed document, especially a writer’s first version of a book before it is published

  • The author writing about his or her memories, usually going back to childhood

  • Describing something by saying it is something else, usually unrelated

  • An extremely short story, generally no more than a few hundred words, also flash fiction

  • The feeling that the writer is trying to evoke in their reader, such as anxiety or joy

  • An idea that is used many times in a piece of writing or music

  • National Novel Writing Month (November each year). Begun in 1999 as a daunting but straightforward challenge: to write 50,000 words of a novel in thirty days.

  • A type of writing that is told in great detail and focuses solely on the practice of telling stories

  • The narrator tells the story from one character’s perspective at a time

  • The all-knowing voice in a story, with a greater insight into the narrative’s events than that of any individual character

  • A piece of long narrative in literary prose

  • A narrative prose fiction whose length is shorter than most novels, but longer than most short stories

  • The naming of a thing or action by a vocal imitation of the sound associated with it (such as buzz, hiss)

  • A map of the piece of writing you are working on

  • The rhythm of the entire story and how the chain of events fall into place

  • A piece of writing, music, etc., that imitates the style of someone or something else in an amusing way

  • A style of writing where what would be the object of a sentence becomes the subject of the sentence

  • The series of events in a story

  • The chronological order of events in a story

  • A moment in a story that impacts the character or the direction of the story in some way

  • Showing the reader exactly what it is like to be somewhere

  • The perspective from which a story is told

  • The pages of a book, such as the title page and contents, before the main text

  • Carefully checking for errors in a text before it is published, and after it is laid out in book format

  • A writing style that doesn’t follow a structure of rhyming or meter but a structure arranged into sentences and paragraphs

  • The main character in a story

  • A company that will take your manuscript and prepare it for publishing, and publish your work

  • An event that creates a fresh complication for the protagonist

  • The section of the plot leading up to the climax

  • Involves plots centred on love and adventure

  • A genre of fiction literature whose content is imaginative, but based in science

  • A roadmap that tells a reader how the audience will see and hear the events unfolding on screen or stage

  • The next instalment of a story

  • The time, place, and environment in which narrative events unfold

  • A piece of prose fiction that can typically be read in a single sitting

  • Language that describes something by comparing it to something else, with the words like or as

  • The person, place, thing, or idea that is doing or being

  • The implicit meaning of a text, not being stated directly

  • A thing that stands for or represents something else

  • An overview of the storyline or main points and other defining factors

  • The arrangement or order of words, determined by both the writer’s style and grammar rules

  • A universal idea, lesson, or message explored throughout a work of literature

  • Writing from the third-person point of view, or outsider looking in, and using pronouns like he, she, it, or they

  • The mood or attitude created by the way that the author says something in a piece of writing

  • The protagonist of a story, in which, despite their virtuous character, they meet defeat or an untimely end

  • Time-tested methods of employing figurative language to enrich a written work

  • Any narrator who misleads readers, either deliberately or unwittingly

  • The mixture of tone, word choice, point of view, syntax, punctuation, and rhythm that make up sentences and paragraphs

  • The current project you’re writing

  • The process of creating a fictional world within your novel that is entirely different to our own

  • A usually temporary condition in which a writer finds it impossible to proceed with the writing of a novel, play, or other work

  • Literature designed and written for Young Adults (age 12-18)