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Home > Reporting, Writing & Editing
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6:09 PM  Feb. 21, 2007
Creating the Serial Narrative: A Starter Kit
Chapter Three: A Story Form with Benefits
By Roy Clark (More articles by this author)
Senior Scholar, Poynter Institute

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The serial narrative is not the salvation of the news business. It's nothing more than another tool that helps the writer tell a certain kind of story. As a distinctive literary form, the serial does offer special advantages and opportunities.

1.) It helps convert Sunday to daily readership.

Most newspapers have more Sunday than daily readers. Sunday circulation has grown in some places, even as daily circulation has dropped. When you begin a dramatic story on a Sunday, ending the first chapter with a cliffhanger, you invite the reader to buy the Monday paper to follow along. I have received many messages from Florida tourists who picked up one of my series and found ways to follow the story when they returned to their home states or foreign countries. This process is much easier now that chapters can be stored for readers on Web sites. So consider serialization as a way to get older readers to try out your Web site.
CREATING THE SERIAL NARRATIVE: A STARTER KIT
Creating the Serial Narrative: About this series

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2.) It helps build readership.

Many factors and variables determine newspaper circulation, so it is difficult to gauge the effect of any one story or serial. But the The (Baltimore) Sun insists its circulation rose by four percent during the 17 days of a serial titled "God's Other Plan," about the premature death of a young mother. Readers of Tom French's work have been known to meet the circulation trucks to follow a series. Many readers have told me that they read every word of "Three Little Words," even though they were disinclined to read most standard newspaper series. Readers of The Oregonian in Portland have sent messages in gratitude for the serials of Tom Hallman by the thousands and thousands.

3.) It reconciles the benefits of short and long writing.

Since the creation of USA Today, story length has been the bone of contention in American newsrooms, and continues to be with the development of online news sites. Back in the day, the kind of journalist you were depended upon whether you favored the news "nuggets" of USA Today or the "megaturd" sagas of The Philadelphia Inquirer. In the late 1990s, the serial narrative offered a path toward compromise and reconciliation. "Three Little Words" contained almost 30,000 words on a serious, complicated topic, but was divided over 29 days. Writers can report in depth and over time, aspiring to their best and most enterprising work. Time-starved readers can experience the story in shorter chapters and in a way that does not encourage them to ignore the rest of the paper.

4.) The serial is compatible with new forms of media, such as the Internet.

"Three Little Words" was the first series published on the St. Petersburg Times Web site. Publication there (as well as in the daily paper) had many advantages:

  • Readers who missed a chapter in the newspaper could find it on the Web site.
  • Readers could stack up the chapters on the Web site and read the story all at once.
  • Readers all over the world could follow the story.
  • Students from the St. Petersburg area, who attended college out of town, could follow the story.
  • Hundreds of readers could leave messages while the story was in progress.
  • Some of these readers became potential sources for the story.
  • The Minneapolis Star Tribune Web site included these features with "Sadie's Ring": my reading two chapters aloud, my 90-minute conversation with staffers about the series, and my reading a summary of each chapter. (Think, now, of the podcast as another vehicle for publication.)

It turns out that Web sites crave return traffic, and the serial offers online readers the narrative invitation to return each day to follow the story.

5.) The serial puts the community in conversation with itself.

Because of its dimensions, the serial magnifies all story effects, good and bad. If the story is sensational, it will appear more sensational as a serial. If it is sensitive, it will appear more sensitive. Because it extends over days and weeks, it inspires a special kind of community conversation. Readers "live in the story" during its run and often make emotional connections with the characters. A sign of the power of the serial: Many readers will become curious about what happens to the characters after the story ends.

TIP: Updates and sequels are at times appropriate.

Tomorrow: Chapter Four -- Kick-Starting the Story


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