Many writers I know find writing a synopsis VERY difficult. There’s so much you want to include. How do you decide what to leave out? How long it is supposed to be? What tone should you write it in?
5 Steps To A Perfect Synopsis
1. Take time to set up the premise
Use the opening paragraph to set up the setting, premise, and other world building ideas. You only have one chance to draw us into your world. If someone hasn’t read your book and is reading your synopsis first what will they need to know?
2. Focus on conflict
We want to know what trouble we’ll be encountering in this book. What are the road blocks? What hurdles does the main character have to overcome? How high are the stakes?
3. Clearly outline the character’s growth arc
A one dimensional main character will suck the air out of your manuscript’s tires. We want to see a character develop and grow over the course of the book. The synopsis is the perfect place to boil this down. Show how the main character reacts in certain situations. Bring them to life on the pages of the synopsis even though you’re not writing creatively.
4. Focus on plot
What is the narrative arc? The synopsis is a play-by-play. Don’t be afraid to tell–even though in your manuscript you’ll be showing, not telling, right?–because we want to know what the main scenes will entail. It’s hard to know how many details to include, but if you start with a summary of each chapter and then mould it together you’ll be able to see what chapters are the most important to the reader’s understanding of the book.
5. Tell us the ending
Yes, please tell us the ending! This is a common misconception. A synopsis isn’t a query letter and it isn’t your back cover copy. Tell us how things resolve. Being able to resolve your manuscript is a big writerly skill and we want to see you can do it well.
A simple synopsis: premise, rising action of conflict, climax, character growth, resolution.
What NOT to do in your synopsis:
- Write it in your main character’s voice
- Include EVERY plot point
- Detail what the reader will learn and hit us over the head with metaphor and symbolism
- Leave the ending, or other major plot points, out
TIP: If you want to be prepared in advance for when an agent asks, have a 1 and 3 page synopsis ready. Some agents ask for synopses of different lengths so save yourself some time when you get a request.
Some synopsis resources:
How to Write a Synopsis Without Losing Your Mind
Don’t make a synopsis too long. Most agents are incapable of reading more than an twitter sentence.
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Thank you, Carly. Extremely helpful.
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Carly, how would you recommend that author hopefuls approach writing synopses in the case of large, complex, multiple narrative arc novels? Obviously you need to straddle the line between giving enough information and not writing a second novel in the form of a synopsis. Do you have examples of synopses for complex books that work well?
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I don’t have examples, but the main principle there is world building, setting up the premise and following the complex plot. If there are multiple sub plots only include the most important.
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I’d be happy to share a one-page synopsis with you, Kelly, as an example, from my thriller, Eye of the Storm. Please email me: ej@ejlister.ca
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How do these tips translate to a picture book? Is a query letter and perhaps logline typically sufficient for a PB?
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Perhaps. But it doesn’t hurt to have a synopsis too. Same guidelines.
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I’ve been flapping so much over this – thank you for the post and for the further links!
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You’re welcome!
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Reblogged this on Think Positive, Think Write.
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Thank you for this!
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Reblogged this on E.L. Pierce and commented:
Synopsis Advice – Some Great Tips
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Writing synopsis or book review is very difficult even for experienced writers.
It contains tiny moments that makes that process so difficult. You can browse this page to find out these tips and make your experience better
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Reblogged this on Windy Peri.
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Reblogged this on Writing from Alter-Space and commented:
Instead of writing a synopsis for my new novel, I seem to researching them instead. Can’t even begin to work out how to write one to these specs:
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It’s difficult and Thanks! I just wrote one!!
https://universeofmysecrets.blogspot.com/2018/09/secrets-synopsis.html
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Thank you Carly. This article was helpful!
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Carly, thank you for your fabulous tips on the daunting writing of a synopsis.
Do you provide a query and synopsis editing service? If so, cost and turnaround time?
Thank you.
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