A synopsis is an outline of the plot of a book
that is 2-5 pages with from 500-1250 words. If your synopsis is 25-30 pages
long, the agent or editor might lose interest after the first 5, so be
succinct. You don’t want your reader to fall asleep.
When you write a synopsis, first start with your
pitch summary from the blurb on the back of your book cover. After the pitch
summary, then write the full synopsis using a paragraph for each plot point and
tell the ending.
- Keep your language clear and active, and focus on telling the story. As your plot unfolds, write it the way you would tell about a movie to a friend, skip the dull parts and hit the main highlights.
- Start at the first scene in the book with the main character: “From the moment she woke on that chilly February morning, Savannah Smith knew without a doubt that she would divorce her husband.”
- Show the beginning, middle, and end with main character conflicts and resolutions. Don’t get bogged down in details. Stick to a few main characters – perhaps the protagonist and antagonist and make their core conflicts and their emotional ups and downs, with their twists and turns.
- When you introduce a new character, give a quick character sketch: “Burly Jones is a 36-year-old workaholic whose biggest joys in life are horseshoes, women, and his motorcycle, not necessarily in that order.”
- Include, perhaps, one piece of dialogue between the protagonist and the antagonist to give evidence of the tone of the story.
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