Master Fiction Writing

Stuart Wakefield

With 25+ years in theatre, media, and coaching, I’ve honed the art of storytelling. Now, I’m thrilled to share that expertise with you on “Master Fiction Writing.” Whether you’re crafting memorable characters or building gripping plots, each episode is backed by examples from literary pros. Recognised as a top book coach, my mission is to help your stories shine. Ready to master the craft? Subscribe today!

  1. 1d ago

    The Phone Call Scene: Turning Distance into Drama

    A phone call scene can look deceptively small on the page. Two people talk, some information changes hands, then someone hangs up, but if that’s all the scene is doing, it may be falling flat. In this episode of Master Fiction Writing, Stuart Wakefield takes a deep dive into one of fiction’s most overlooked craft moments: the phone call scene. Why do so many phone calls in novels, short stories, and novellas feel like convenient little tubes for information? And how can writers turn them into scenes full of pressure, subtext, tension, comedy, longing, and consequence? This episode explores why a phone call is never just two people talking. A good phone call scene can reveal a lie, expose a relationship dynamic, shift power between characters, create suspense, deepen romance, or make a reader laugh because the visible half of the scene is quietly falling apart. You’ll learn how to diagnose a flat phone call, how to give your point-of-view character something active to want, how to use silence and pauses, and how to make the unseen caller a powerful dramatic force. Stuart also looks at how phone calls work across genres including romance, mystery, thriller, horror, comedy, family drama, literary fiction, historical fiction, and speculative fiction. Includes practical revision questions and a simple exercise to help you rewrite one phone call scene in your own manuscript. Links Mentioned Stuart Wakefield / The Book Coach:www.thebookcoach.co ProWritingAid Write With Pride week:https://prowritingaid.com/write-with-pride/sign-up Stuart is presenting at ProWritingAid’s Write With Pride week on 24 June. Session title to be confirmed before publishing. Action Items from This Episode Find one phone call scene in your manuscript, ideally one that feels a little flat, functional, or overly focused on delivering information. Read the scene once and highlight only the information being exchanged. What facts does the reader need to know? Then ask: Why is this moment a phone call rather than an in-person scene, text, letter, or summary?What does the point-of-view character want before the call begins?What do they fear will happen?What are they trying not to say?What does the other caller want, hide, avoid, or control?What can the reader see that one or both characters cannot?What changes by the end of the call?What would be lost if the scene were cut?Next, add the visible half of the scene. Where is your character? What are they doing while they speak? Who might overhear? What object, interruption, silence, or physical action could carry pressure? Finally, rewrite the call so the spoken conversation and the visible scene tell slightly different truths. Let the dialogue say one thing, then let the body, setting, silence, or timing reveal another. That gap is where the reader leans in.

    25 min
  2. May 6

    Third Person Isn’t One Thing: How Narrative Distance Changes Everything

    In this episode of Master Fiction Writing, we untangle one of the most confusing pieces of fiction craft: third-person point of view. Because “write it in third person” sounds simple enough until you realise third person can mean several very different things. We’ll look at five major forms of third-person narration: Third-person objective, where the reader only sees what can be observed from the outside.Third-person limited, where we stay inside one character’s perspective at a time.Third-person deep or close limited, where the prose moves tightly into a character’s lived experience.Third-person multiple limited, where several characters carry the story in separate scenes or chapters.And third-person omniscient, where a larger narrative intelligence can move beyond any one character’s mind.Using the same scene, we’ll explore how each form changes the reader’s experience of intimacy, tension, voice, distance, and information. This is a practical, example-led episode for writers who want to understand not just what point of view is, but how to choose the right kind of third person for the story they’re trying to tell. And if you enjoy the podcast and would like to support future episodes, you can buy me a virtual coffee over on Ko-fi: https://ko-fi.com/masterfictionwriting No pressure at all, but it does help keep the podcast going, and lets me pretend I’m a terrifyingly organised media empire rather than one man talking earnestly about point of view into a microphone.

    40 min
  3. Apr 29

    Writing Characters When You’re Afraid of Getting Them Wrong

    In this episode of Master Fiction Writing, we explore one of the most quietly intimidating parts of writing fiction: creating characters when you’re afraid of getting them wrong. Inspired by a listener question, this episode looks at the difference between research as preparation and research as protection. Research, plotting, and worldbuilding are essential tools, especially when your story is inspired by real histories, cultures, political conflicts, or human suffering. But sometimes those tools can become a very respectable hiding place from the messier, more intimate work of character. We’ll look at why character work can feel so exposing, how to begin before you feel perfectly ready, and how to invent responsibly without becoming paralysed by fear. You’ll also learn practical ways into character, including dictated monologues, private letters, character complaints, petty desires, contradictions, and the wonderfully freeing “ugly first character pass.” If you’ve ever delayed writing because you felt unqualified, uncertain, or afraid of causing harm, this episode offers a calmer, braver way forward. Not certainty. Not perfection. Just care, humility, specificity, and the courage to begin. If the podcast helps you with your writing and you’d like to support the time, thought, and mildly alarming number of notes that go into each episode, you can do that here: https://ko-fi.com/masterfictionwriting

    42 min

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About

With 25+ years in theatre, media, and coaching, I’ve honed the art of storytelling. Now, I’m thrilled to share that expertise with you on “Master Fiction Writing.” Whether you’re crafting memorable characters or building gripping plots, each episode is backed by examples from literary pros. Recognised as a top book coach, my mission is to help your stories shine. Ready to master the craft? Subscribe today!

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