FREYTAG
Fiction
Prose
Poetry
Identify This Writer!
100

The setup of a story, or the background information given at the beginning.

Exposition/Stasis

100

The angle from which a story is told or narrated. Examples: First person, Second person, Omniscient etc.

Point of View

100

A situation in which a character must make a difficult choice between two courses of action, either of which forces them to betray an ethical principle.

Moral Dilemma

100

When a speaker says one thing but means another

Verbal irony

100

Author of eleven books, winner of the Booker prize, the MacArthur Genius grant and the Guggenheim fellowship. His work is often found pinned to the fridge of many aspiring writers.

George Saunders

200

The unexpected event that upsets the character’s status quo and launches the story.

Inciting incident

200

According to Aristotle, a good ending must be _______, yet _________.

surprising, yet inevitable

200

The main idea or underlying meaning of a literary work.

Theme

200

A figure of speech that describes an object or action in a way that isn't literally true

Metaphor

200

Member of the Bloomsbury group. Pioneer of Stream-of-Consciousness. Author of classics such as Mrs. Dalloway and Orlando.

Virginia Woolf

300

The increasing complications (or the escalating tension) as the character attempts to solve the problem.

Rising Action

300

The attitude of the narrator or viewpoint character toward story events and other characters

Tone

300

A a short piece of writing on a particular subject. (In French, this word means ‘attempt’ or ‘try’)

Essay

300

Vivid language that is designed to appeal to the senses. (Hint: Painting a picture with words)

Imagery

300

Indian born British American novelist. A fatwa condemning him to death (bounty valued in 2022 at $3m) was issued by the leader of Iran in 1989.

Salman Rushdie

400

The turning point of a story or the height of the action.

Climax

400

__________ is when the audience understands more about a situation than some of the characters do.

Dramatic Irony

400

Give an example of an allegory.

The Chronicles of Narnia, Animal Farm, The Dark Knight

400

a figure of speech that describes something as better or worse than it actually is by way of extreme exaggeration.

Hyperbole

400

Canadian. Bestselling poet. Instagram Sensation. Author of the number one New York Times Bestseller ‘Milk and honey’.

Rupi Kaur

500

The final resolution of the intricacies of a plot. (Hint: French word for untying)

Denouement

500

First articulated by Joseph Campbell, this is a common story structure shared by cultures worldwide, in which a character ventures into unknown territory. Facing conflict and adversity, the hero ultimately triumphs before returning home, transformed.

Hero’s Journey

500

Complete this structure:

Setup→  Storyline 1→ Target Assumption→ Connector→ Reinterpretation→ Storyline 2→   ______

Punch

500

A poem that describes a work of art.

Ekphrastic poetry

500

French Writer. Aristocrat. Withdrew from public life to write in his castle. Created a new literary genre—the essay.

Michel de Montaigne