In this three-part feature, Natascha Biebow suggests key ways to raise the STAKES in your picture book, to make readers (and editors) really care!
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You might think: Picture book plots don’t have the complexity of
sub-plots and intricate characters like novels, so do you always need to
have characters with sound motivation and plots with high stakes?
The answer is YES! Preferably. Even picture books for small children have plots that encourage a key element – page turns!
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In Dear Zoo by Rod Campbell, a preschool classic for very little ones, the zoo sends the reader increasingly outlandish animals. How will it all end?! |
The best books, of course, are those that you absolutely can’t put down.
That you want to read over and over again . . . WHY? Because you CARE,
you want to find out what will happen next, you are intrigued to see how
it will all end, there is a mystery to be solved, something that drives
the reader towards a satisfying ending, or similar.
WHY do you care? Because there are stakes – something is at RISK.
STEP 1: DO THE “SO WHAT?” CHECK - Check the stakes in your story. Ask yourself: What does your main character need and want, and importantly, IF they don’t get this, so what?
Really ask yourself. Be honest. Does what happens in your story matter?
Will readers CARE? The answer to this key question will show whether your picture book story’s stakes are high enough.
Will readers CARE? The answer to this key question will show whether your picture book story’s stakes are high enough.
Dot has a new baby brother. Mama and Papa coo over everything the new baby brother does. Life for Dot is different with the baby brother.
So what? Do you really care about this plot? It sounds a little familiar, doesn’t it? There are many great books about new baby siblings, after all. New picture books need to stand out.
What if . . .
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| A baby arrives on the doorstep . . . Detail of baby in the basket from Wolfie the Bunny by A Dyckman & Z OHora |
It’s a family of bunnies and the baby brother is a wolf?
AND
What if Dot is the only one who realizes and tries to warn the whole family?
A-ha! That’s a fairly big problem – the wolf might EAT THEM ALL UP (seeing as they’re bunnies and all . . .)!
What if now . . .
The author adds an in-built time constraint: Dot must convince her
parents that she is right quickly, or the family might become Wolf Lunch
any minute!
The family doesn't listen . . . (of course). More tension.
So, now the story is quite engaging – readers will probably want to keep turning the pages to find out how it will end. Will he, won’t he eat the bunnies?
BUT, keep going.
The author raises the stakes even higher!
For instance, what if . . .
Dot and the baby wolf suddenly meet a BEAR, who tries to eat the baby brother for dinner. Oh, no! Now Dot has a dilemma.
Dot doesn’t care much for her baby brother, but she doesn’t exactly want him to be eaten either, does she . . .?
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The baby is really a wolf! From Wolfie the Bunny by Anne Dyckman & Zachariah OHora
AND
What if Dot is the only one who realizes and tries to warn the whole family?
The family doesn't listen . . . (of course). More tension.
So, now the story is quite engaging – readers will probably want to keep turning the pages to find out how it will end. Will he, won’t he eat the bunnies?
For instance, what if . . .
Dot doesn’t care much for her baby brother, but she doesn’t exactly want him to be eaten either, does she . . .?
This twist adds an unexpected bit of humour to the story, and also ups the ante for Dot so she must choose. Suddenly, the stakes matter to Dot personally.
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| The hug moment From Wolfie the Bunny by Anne Dyckman & Zachariah OHora |
Internal stakes, that drive the character's growth: Dot’s dilemma about having a baby brother and her values. In the best stories, the main character has grown and changed by the end, leading to a satisfying ending.
External stakes, that drive the plot forward: the adopted baby, the threat of a wolf to a family of bunnies, the parents ignoring Dot, and the arrival of the bear.
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Natascha Biebow is
an experienced editor, mentor and coach, who loves working with authors
and illustrators at all levels to help them to shape their stories. www.blueelephantstoryshaping.com
Check out the Cook Up a Picture Book Coaching Courses.
Natascha is also the author of the bestselling nonfiction picture book: The Crayon Man: The True Story of the Invention of Crayola Crayons
Natascha is also the author of the bestselling nonfiction picture book: The Crayon Man: The True Story of the Invention of Crayola Crayons













