Master Fiction Writing cover art

Master Fiction Writing

Master Fiction Writing

Written by: Stuart Wakefield
Listen for free

About this listen

With 25+ years in theatre, media, and coaching, I’ve honed the art of storytelling. Now, I’m thrilled to share that expertise with you on “Master Fiction Writing.” Whether you’re crafting memorable characters or building gripping plots, each episode is backed by examples from literary pros. Recognised as a top book coach, my mission is to help your stories shine. Ready to master the craft? Subscribe today!Stuart Wakefield Art
Episodes
  • Set Up Your 2026 Writing Year: A Plan That Survives Real Life
    Dec 18 2025

    Set yourself up for a 2026 writing year that actually survives real life. In this episode, you’ll build a simple, motivating plan without hustle-culture guilt or impossible schedules.

    We’ll choose a one- to three-word theme to guide your decisions, pick three clear priorities (plus one powerful “not this year”), map your year by quarters, and set a weekly minimum that keeps you moving even when life gets loud.

    You’ll also learn how to put writing into your calendar for the next two weeks, create a few tiny systems that make showing up easier, and use a straightforward reset plan when you miss a week (because you will - and that’s normal).

    Grab a notebook and follow along: by the end, you’ll have a writing map you can trust, and a next step you can take today.

    Show More Show Less
    9 mins
  • The Pink Plot Machine: Why Legally Blonde Is a Story-Structure Powerhouse
    Dec 4 2025

    Is Legally Blonde secretly one of the best-plotted films of the 2000s? In this episode of Master Fiction Writing, host Stuart Wakefield performs a full story autopsy on Elle Woods’ journey from dumped sorority president to victorious Harvard lawyer.

    We dig into how the film builds a rock-solid causal chain (where every major beat grows logically from the last) and how Elle’s external quest (Harvard, the internship, the murder trial) welds perfectly to her internal arc from “choose me” to “I choose myself.” Along the way, we unpack the emotional climax after Callahan’s harassment, the perm-fuelled courtroom payoff, and why the Bend and Snap is the least important thing in this script.

    You’ll walk away with concrete questions and exercises you can apply to your own story, whether you’re writing novels, screenplays, or plays. Spoilers for Legally Blonde abound, but the craft lessons are evergreen.

    Show More Show Less
    24 mins
  • The Inciting Incident Isn’t Big. It’s Binding.
    Nov 26 2025

    If your opening goes boom but your hero can shrug and carry on, that’s fireworks, not story. In this episode I breaks down the real job of an inciting incident - to bind your protagonist to an obligation that costs something now and points the story arrow.

    Here's what you'll learn:

    • What “binding” means in plain English and how to spot it fast
    • The five ways a moment can stick Bond, Irreversibility, New stakes, Direction, Pressure
    • A spoken mini-exercise you can even do while walking the dog
    • A quick diagnostic to fix fake incidents that are loud but optional
    • A simple before and after that turns a limp delivery into a clock-ticking crisis

    We'll also look at:

    • Pride and Prejudice Darcy’s slight and Lizzy’s promise to herself
    • Legally Blonde Elle’s public vow to Harvard Law
    • A Streetcar Named Desire Blanche’s choice to stay and conceal

    Want help binding your own opening? Start here and visit ⁠⁠https://www.thebookcoach.co⁠⁠

    Show More Show Less
    12 mins
No reviews yet