Master the Art of Fiction: Prose Resources
The Art of Fiction
Welcome to our prose resources page. Every story begins the same way, with an idea of a direction that you can’t decide what to do with, but that you know is good. a tickle, so to speak, a character who hits the spot and moves the plot, a setting so vivid it seems real. You get a brief look at perfection, and it itches.
Fiction is the art of making this visible. It asks you to invent people who have never existed and make readers sorrow when they die. It asks you to build worlds from scratch and then pretend they were always there and as real as ours. It asks you to find the exact right word for this, enough to grab your reader and even make them pay for it, hopefully.
That’s a tall order, but deeply satisfying.
This hub is a structured guide to the mechanics that make fiction work. Good for drafting your first short story or a novel, the resources here break down the essential craft elements: plot structure, pacing, point of view, character, dialogue, setting, world-building, and the elusive art of showing rather than telling. Each section connects you to focused guides, writing prompts, and practical tools designed to move your story forward.
You’ll also find a live search of the Project Gutenberg library below, with thousands of public-domain novels, novellas, and story collections available to read, study, and use as models for your own work. Reading like a writer is one of the most efficient writing tools available, and the library puts literary history at your fingertips.
Fiction isn’t a formula. But it does have a shape, and once you can see that shape, you can bend it to your will.
Wisdom From Shakespeare
Writing Resources
Inspiration
Discover creative writing prompts, visual inspiration, and techniques to spark your next great story idea.
Fiction Types
Types of fiction: novel vs. novella vs. short story vs. flash fiction, length and intent explained.
Writing Style
Plotter or Pantser, what is your writing style? Explore ways to lay out and begin to write.
Plot
Every story needs a shape. Learn about story arc, conflict and plot structures and designs.
Pacing
Movement, tension, conflict. How do you keep your readers turning the pages to see what’s next?
Point of View
Who tells your story? First, second, third, omniscient person, the voice you choose sets the story tone.
Setting
No matter where or when your story takes place, planning the setting is crucial to writing effectively.
Character
Learn how to write complex protagonists, believable villains, and supporting casts.
Dialogue
Learn how to write realistic dialogue, and make your characters sound authentic and distinct.
World Building
Create immersive worlds that feel real. Learn how to weave culture, geography, and history into believable settings.
Descriptions
Make your details sing. Character, dialogue, setting, and world-building descriptions.
Show vs. Tell
Master the art of “Show vs. Tell” in your writing and learn to use sensory details effectively to catch the reader’s eye.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between a novel, novella, and short story?
Length and scope. A short story is typically under 7,500 words and focuses on a single moment or conflict. A novella runs 20,000–40,000 words with a tighter cast and plot. A novel is 80,000+ words with room for subplots, multiple characters, and full world-building.
What is plot structure and why does it matter?
Plot structure is the path your story follows, the arrangement of events that creates tension, builds to a climax, and delivers resolution. Structure isn’t a formula; it’s a framework. Understanding it lets you make intentional choices about where to apply pressure, and how to make things move the way you want them to move.
What does “show don’t tell” mean in fiction writing?
It means showing information through action, detail, and dialogue rather than direct statement. Instead of telling readers a character is nervous, you show them: the tapping foot, the dry mouth, the sentence started three times and abandoned. Showing pulls readers into the scene rather than reporting it from a distance.
How do I develop a believable fictional character?
Believable characters have consistent internal logic, desires, fears, contradictions, and blind spots that drive their choices. Start with what they want and what’s stopping them. Layer in backstory only as it affects present behavior. Characters become real when their decisions surprise you but make internal sense.
What is point of view in fiction and how do I choose one?
Point of view is the lens through which your story is told; first person (I), second (you), third limited (he/she/they, one character’s perspective), or third omniscient (all-knowing narrator). Your choice shapes reader distance and information control parameters. First person is immediate; third limited is flexible; omniscient is ambitious and harder to sustain.
How do I write realistic dialogue?
Realistic dialogue reveals character traits and explanations, advances plot, and sounds natural without being a transcript of real speech. Read it aloud, if it stalls, cut it. Give each character a distinct voice shaped by background and personality. Use subtext: what characters don’t say is often more powerful than what they do.
What is pacing in a story and how do I control it?
Pacing is the speed at which your story moves. Short sentences, sharp cuts, and action accelerate pace. Long sentences, interiority, and description slow it down. Tension requires contrast, you can’t sustain urgency without moments of stillness. Controlling pacing means controlling how readers experience time inside your story.
Where can I find free public domain fiction to read?
Project Gutenberg offers over 70,000 free public domain books including novels, novellas, and short story collections. Use the search tool on this page to browse by title or author.
Start Writing
GoRhyme’s prose and poetry tools are built for writers at every stage. Experiment with the Blackout Poetry Maker to find unexpected meaning in existing text, play with language using Magnetic Fridge Poetry Pro, or explore form and structure with Constellation Poetry. Every tool on the Prose & Poetry hub is designed to move your writing forward — from first idea to finished draft.
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