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Anatomy of Genres: How Story Forms Explain the Way the World Works
Anatomy of Genres: How Story Forms Explain the Way the World Works | John Truby
5 posts | 2 read | 4 to read
A guide to understanding the major genres of the story world by the legendary writing teacher and author of The Anatomy of Story, John Truby. Most people think genres are simply categories on Netflix or Amazon that provide a helpful guide to making entertainment choices. Most people are wrong. Genre stories aren't just a small subset of the films, video games, TV shows, and books that people consume. They are the all-stars of the entertainment world, comprising the vast majority of popular stories worldwide. That's why businesses--movie studios, production companies, video game studios, and publishing houses--buy and sell them. Writers who want to succeed professionally must write the stories these businesses want to buy. Simply put, the storytelling game is won by mastering the structure of genres. The Anatomy of Genres: How Story Forms Explain the Way the World Works is the legendary writing teacher John Truby's step-by-step guide to understanding and using the basic building blocks of the story world. He details the three ironclad rules of successful genre writing, and analyzes more than a dozen major genres and the essential plot events, or "beats," that define each of them. As he shows, the ability to combine these beats in the right way is what separates stories that sell from those that don't. Truby also reveals how a single story can combine elements of different genres, and how the best writers use this technique to craft unforgettable stories that stand out from the crowd. Just as Truby's first book, The Anatomy of Story, changed the way writers develop stories, The Anatomy of Genres will enhance their quality and expand the impact they have on the world.
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Pinta
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^^p495, in the middle of a discussion of Gangster plots, Truby drops “The United States was built on two genocides” & leaves it there. Agreed, but topic was the moral code of “Mad Men,” sir? KEY POINT! 🤣

P500 “KEY POINT: far from being an objective description of a form of government, democracy is a culture and religion that promises that everyone can be free and equal at the same time.”

Waydaminute! I thought we were talking about Gatsby? 😂

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Pinta
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Truby‘s overconfident generalizations on the inner workings of storytelling, but the insights are real. Why certain genres work for certain themes (Crime=moral code, Science Fiction=individual & society, Myth=life journey, etc.). Genres as systems. Heroes & antiheroes. Adam & Eve as early horror story. Simplistic but convincing. Detailed & smart, but rigid & oversold. Build a framework, then celebrate works that jump the frame. 2022

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TracyReadsBooks
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Pickpick

Fascinating book about what the author characterizes as hierarchy of the 14 main genres, what makes up each one, how to go about writing a story in that genre or, better yet, transcending it, & what each genre reveals about life generally—from horror (about life & death) to science fiction (how to create [a better] society) & then love stories (how to live “beautifully” with someone). Movies, films, & books are all discussed. Interesting read.

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TracyReadsBooks
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TracyReadsBooks
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More about craft and what it all means for this week‘s nonfiction reading…

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