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HOW TO WRITE A GOOD BOOK SUMMARY
Step 1 - Start Reading
Step 2 - Highlight and Take Notes
- Highlight the book and take notes in the margins
- Use stickies to mark pages and take notes
- Take notes in a separate notebook
Step 3 - Write Mini-Summaries for Each Chapter
Step 4 - Organize Your Mini-Summaries
For fiction books, group them by where they fall into the story structure:
- Beginning (Intro to characters, setting, problem)
- Rising Action (Tension around problem builds)
- Climax (Highest point in tension)
- Falling Action (Resolving loose ends after tension is resolved)
- Resolution (Closure)
Step 5 - Condense Main Points Into a Bullet ListCondense Main Points Into a Bullet List
Now, with everything laid out in front of you, scan through each summary and pick out the most important ideas and plot points. Jot these down in bullet list form on a separate sheet of paper.
When deciding which fictional plot points to include, ask yourself, “Is this information vital for understanding the ‘big picture’ of the story?” If the answer is No, cut it.
Step 6 - Write Your Summary
At this point, all you have to do is convert your bullet list to paragraph form.
The key here is to avoid rambling. Remember, this is a summary. You’re not re-writing the entire book.
Here’s a trick: Imagine you’re in high school and your BFF is about to take an exam on a book she didn’t read. You have two minutes to explain it to her before the bell rings and class starts. What do you include? What do you leave out?
How to Write a Book Summary Cheat Sheet
Book Summary Structure:
Book Summary of TITLE, by AUTHOR
Main characters:
CHARACTER 1: DESCRIPTION
CHARACTER 2: DESCRIPTION
CHARACTER 3: DESCRIPTION
Etc…
CHARACTER 1: DESCRIPTION
CHARACTER 2: DESCRIPTION
CHARACTER 3: DESCRIPTION
Etc…
[INTRO PARAGRAPH – Give a quick overview of the entire story and main points. For fiction, mention anything someone would need to know about how the book is written for your summary to make sense—e.g. the setting jumps backward/forward in time every chapter, point of view changes to a different character each chapter, etc.]
[BODY PARAGRAPHS – In each body paragraph, elaborate on one main idea/plot point from your bullet list. The number of body paragraphs will depend on how many main ideas or plot points there are.]
[CLOSING PARAGRAPH – For fiction, describe how the story ends and the overall theme of the book. For nonfiction, sum up all the main ideas into one overarching takeaway.]
How to write a simple summary
WRITING A SCREENPLAY
Writing Class: Makeovers
Describing words
Enter a noun into this website and get a range of words to help you describe it. Superb for creative or descriptive writing projects
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