Try GOLD - Free
What Is Your Story Question?
Writer’s Digest
|January - February 2025
Revision and editing advice to take your first draft to the next level.
When a story isn't working when you know it's not quite coming With not together, when beta readers and crit partners confirm your fears but can't put a finger on why, or you're not getting offers from agents or publishers-savvy authors start trying to diagnose the issue by examining its component parts, like characterization, plot, and stakes.
But often, the problem is both more intrinsic and overarching than any one storytelling element; authors get lost in the trees and can't quite get a grip on the forest. If you know your story lacks something, the problem may be a missing, vague, or undefined central story question.
WHAT A STORY QUESTION IS (AND ISN'T)
The simplest way to think of your story question is as the main unknown that readers are reading to find out: Will Katniss survive the Hunger Games? How will Stella get her groove back? Where did Bernadette go-and why? Good, engaging stories have many unknowns, but it's this central question that gives a story its spine, that creates a propulsive throughline for the narrative that hooks readers and keeps them turning pages. The
central story question is a concrete and specific unknown with a clear, tangible answer.
Humans tend to be curious creatures. It's why suspense and tension are such powerful tools for hooking readers and creating momentum in your story. Give readers an unresolved question and--if you've earned their investment in your characters and their journey—they feel compelled to read on to find the answers.
The story question is the core unresolved issue that gives your story cohesion and provides the overarching framework for all the other mysteries and uncertainties that are laced throughout the most effective and compelling tales.
It doesn't work in a vacuum, but hand in hand with the other essential elements of story:
This story is from the January - February 2025 edition of Writer’s Digest.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Writer’s Digest
Writer’s Digest
Lauren Groff
The three-time National Book Award finalist discusses her new short story collection, Brawler, and the necessity of failure in writing.
14 mins
March / April 2026
Writer’s Digest
Seven
THE CHALLENGE: Write a short story of 650 words or fewer based on the photo below.
2 mins
March / April 2026
Writer’s Digest
Pacing in Nonfiction
It's all about story.
5 mins
March / April 2026
Writer’s Digest
If You're Bored, They're Bored
Five Zero-Draft tricks to ensure tight pacing.
8 mins
March / April 2026
Writer’s Digest
Deities
Gods and goddesses have had power over our imaginations stretching through the ages—whether ancient Norse, Chinese, Mesoamerican, or Greco-Roman, we have a fascination with cosmic beings.
5 mins
March / April 2026
Writer’s Digest
Merging Memory With Imagination
Author Rin-rin Yu's debut middle-grade novel, Goodbye, French Fry, represents a combination of her true childhood experiences and the universal experience of growing into yourself.
5 mins
March / April 2026
Writer’s Digest
Put Yourself in Charge of Your Own Story
Julie Ann Sipos, grand-prize winner of the 33rd annual WD Self-Published Book Awards, on how her career in Hollywood influences her writing style and her business strategy as an indie author.
4 mins
March / April 2026
Writer’s Digest
The Pause Is the Point
How to use stillness to create momentum in your fiction.
10 mins
March / April 2026
Writer’s Digest
Ericka Tiffany Phillips
Ericka Tiffany Phillips is a literary agent at the Stephanie Tade Agency, representing nonfiction authors whose “work have the power to shape culture and catalyze collective transformation,” she says.
2 mins
March / April 2026
Writer’s Digest
Short-Story Dispensers Bring Literature to the Masses
Life is often a wait, whether it's for a commuter train, an appointment with a doctor, or the start of a class.
5 mins
March / April 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
