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How to write a Story Review

Step 1: Write down your thoughts. Write down your thoughts as you read the
narrative, including how you felt, whether it captivated you, what you
enjoyed, and what you thought was missing. Making notes as you
read the story helps you remember your first thoughts and, after
you've completed reading it, allows you to more easily synthesize the
information.
Step 2: Analyze the writing's approach. Every genre, whether it is a mystery,
romance, thriller, comedy, or literary work, has a specific structure
and pacing scheme. To properly address the framework, familiarize
yourself with the fundamentals of each category before examining
the essay.
Step 3: Create a thesis. Focus your attention and organize your thoughts.
Focus on a main topic, such as the author's purpose, a subject, a
character arc, or a storyline. Your thesis will be well-crafted and well-
reviewed if it examines one of these topics.
Step 4: Give your viewpoint. After introducing the author, the story, and some
fundamental publishing information, talk about the story's overall
message, its importance, and if you would suggest it. Give specifics
and examples to support your arguments.
Step 5: Write a plot synopsis. Write about the various parts of the story that
caught your attention, such as the opening, the building tension, or
the climax. Include the character's growth and consider whether or
not they were complex. Examine the story's conclusion and explain
your reaction. Did it make you happy or disappointed you?
Step 6: Discuss the author's intention and if you think the characters, plot, or
writing style helped her achieve it. If the author fails to inspire you or
hold your interest despite the story's intention to be a motivating
narrative of conquering the difficulties, then their efforts were in vain.
Step 7: Dispense wise counsel. If you didn't enjoy the author's work, don't
criticize him or her personally; instead, concentrate your criticism on
the novel's specific components. Give specific examples of how the
story, the plot, or the character development could have been
improved.
Step 8: Make your judgment. In your final paragraph, bring everything
together. Indicate if you would suggest the story overall and what your
thoughts are about it.
 Literary Analysis Theme-Related Questions
• How do the story's characters further the subject or support it?
• How does the story's conflict advance or strengthen the theme?
• How do the symbols within the story build or strengthen the theme?
• How does the author’s tone of the story grow or improve the theme?
• How does the theme of the narrative relate to the setting in which it was
written?
 Literary Analysis Questions About Setting
• How does the setting affect the plot?
• How does the setting affect the conflict?
• How does the setting influence the narrative's tone?

 Character-Related Questions for Literary Analysis


 What is a defect or weakness of the main character?
 What is a defect or weakness of the antagonist?
• What spurs the main character to action?
• What spurs the adversary to action?
• Which character do you find most plausible, and why?
 The narrative and whether you would suggest it.

 Conflict-Related Questions for Literary Analysis


• In what ways does the battle depict the historical setting of the time the
narrative was written?
 How does the author develop a convincing conflict?

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