Matthew Cricchio Matthew Cricchio

No, an Outline Is Not a Scene List

Most outlines fail because they track time,not tension. If you're stuck in "and then" plotting, you need a new unit of design: the sequence.

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Matthew Cricchio Matthew Cricchio

Cause and Effect: How to Make Time Move on the Page

Most writing guides teach plot or prose—but few teach how time moves. This guide reveals the hidden structure behind real-time storytelling: the neurological chain of cause and effect. Learn to anchor beats in pressure, preserve micro-tension, and write scenes that feel lived, not just read. Once you understand how time flows through the line, your fiction stops floating and starts gripping.

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Matthew Cricchio Matthew Cricchio

How to Use Narrative Tableaux in Fiction

Not every moment has to move. Narrative tableaux are static, emotionally charged beats that don’t progress the plot but deepen everything around it. This essay shows how to use them without stalling the story.

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Matthew Cricchio Matthew Cricchio

Designing Flashbacks In Fiction

A flashback isn’t a memory dump. It’s a pressure device. It must interrupt the present, reframe the stakes, and end in a turn. This essay shows how to structure flashbacks that change the story not just explain it.

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Matthew Cricchio Matthew Cricchio

The Rule of 3

The triangle is the most stable structure in the world. Bridges endure because trusses share load. Roofs keep their pitch in weather because rafters brace in threes. Sailors find speed by tacking between shifting winds and a fixed keel. Musicians stack triads so tension can hold and then resolve. Strength and motion at once. That is the geometry you need on the page.

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Matthew Cricchio Matthew Cricchio

Subtext You Can Build

Subtext is design, not mood. Build it in six moves: set aims, cut the honest line, name the cost, choose a behavioral leak, raise the risk once, and time escalation to a line or a gesture. Use dramatized dialogue, spare monologue, and narratized bridges to keep pressure on the page.

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Matthew Cricchio Matthew Cricchio

Character Is Conflict

There are no plot-driven stories. There are no character-driven stories. There are only character-driven plots. Every decision your protagonist makes leaves a trail—that trail is your plot. This essay breaks down how to build characters whose internal needs and external goals collide, generating narrative momentum and emotional depth that readers won’t forget.

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