A good story has many pieces and parts that all work together to make the reader want to read the story over and over again. The most important pieces of the puzzle we call a story, are often overlooked. What really makes a good story is the theme of the story, the setting of the story, and the plot behind the story. Without theme, setting, and plot all you have is a stack of papers with random words on it that don’t make any sense. The definition of theme as stated by Literary Devices is “a main idea; an underlying meaning of a literary work that may be stated directly or indirectly.” Theme is the part of the story that makes the reader want to go deeper and discover more. In Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare, the theme is love and …show more content…
Place is the crossroads of circumstances, the proving ground of, What happened? Who’s here? Who’s coming?...” These simple words are also very powerful in a sense of literature. Setting is the location of a story’s actions, along with the time in which it occurs. Like Eudora Welty said if a story were to pick up everything and move to a different setting then lit would become a completely different story. The character’s feelings and actions depend on the setting. Some may argue that, setting is just where and when the story took place and does not effect the story in any way shape or form. Though it is true that setting is when and where a story took place, it effects the story entirely. Try to imagine Romeo and Juliet set in our time. It would change the whole plot of the story and shift everything …show more content…
Everything else in a story are based around the plot because plot is the events that make up the story. When readers can address and pick apart a really good plot they throw themselves into the story and even some imagine themselves right next to the characters. Once they get that feeling they never want to lose it and even want to spread it. Plot is meant to organize all the information and events in stories in a logical order. Plot contains all of the “big” moments in literature, these moments are exposition, rising action, conflict, climax, falling action and resolution. Critics might claim that you don’t really need a full plot with all of it’s parts to write a good story, but on the contrary you may not see it at first but all the bits and pieces of plots are always in a story, just some may be harder to pick out than others. What if in J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, Harry never discovered that Professor Snape was after the Sorcerer’s Stone, there wouldn’t be a story for Rowling to