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Defining your Book's Premise, Logline, and Elevator Pitch

Defining your Book's Premise, Logline, and Elevator Pitch

Released Wednesday, 17th November 2021
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Defining your Book's Premise, Logline, and Elevator Pitch

Defining your Book's Premise, Logline, and Elevator Pitch

Defining your Book's Premise, Logline, and Elevator Pitch

Defining your Book's Premise, Logline, and Elevator Pitch

Wednesday, 17th November 2021
Good episode? Give it some love!
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Today’s chapter of the #WordWeaverPodcast is short and sweet, but imperative for a great story. Learning how to write a book premise, logline, and define your book’s elevator pitch is the first step to writing a book. The second step is structuring, outlining, and plotting — but first, you need to understand your book’s central idea/theme, what drives the plot. Typically, a premise needs to contain 3 things in a single sentence:

A protagonist

A goal (what does your protagonist want or need?)

A situation or crisis (the protagonist is facing)

You should be able to define what your story is about, why readers should care, and be able to complete this sentence:

[Character] must [do something] to [story goal] or else [disaster/crisis situation/reason why the audience should care].

The Word Weaver Podcast is available on all podcast platforms and now on YouTube.


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