Guide to Narrative Writing
How to plan and write a strong short story for CSEC: structure, openings, and annotated award-winning examples
Purpose
Narrative writing is storytelling. Section C of CSEC English A Paper 2 gives you a stimulus — usually a photo, a phrase you must include, or a scenario — and asks you to write a short story around it. You have 45 minutes.
Markers are looking at four things: how well you used the stimulus, how developed and organised your story is, whether your language fits the tone and audience, and whether your writing is technically clean. Grammar, sentence structure, paragraphs, vocabulary, spelling, and punctuation all count.
The suggested length is 400–450 words, but going over won't cost you marks. The CXC award winner annotated below is over 700 words. The real standard is whether every sentence is doing something — a longer story that stays purposeful beats a shorter one that's been padded to hit a count.
Story Structure
Most effective short stories follow a five-stage arc known as Freytag's Pyramid. Understanding this structure lets you write with intention — building tension deliberately rather than stringing events together at random.
| Stage | What it does | Key advice |
|---|---|---|
| Exposition | Introduces characters, setting, and tone | Don't over-explain — weave details in as the story moves |
| Rising Action | Develops the conflict; tension escalates | This is the longest stage — each obstacle should raise the stakes |
| Climax | The highest point of tension; the turning point | Something irreversible happens — a decision, confrontation, or reveal |
| Falling Action | Deals with the consequences of the climax | Prevents the ending from feeling abrupt |
| Resolution | Ties up loose ends; shows the final outcome | Can be hopeful, tragic, or open-ended |
The inciting incident — the single event that kicks the conflict into motion — ends the exposition and launches the rising action. If your story feels random or flat, it is usually because one of these stages is weak or missing.
How to Open Your Story
Your opening is the first thing the examiner reads. A weak opener signals a weak story. Avoid predictable beginnings like "One sunny morning I got out of bed…" and start instead with one of these four techniques:
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Dialogue — Drop the reader into a conversation already in progress. "Patricia, what time did you go to bed? You look like a raccoon," my mother exclaimed.
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Description — Use sensory details to place the reader in the scene immediately. I woke up to the sound of clanging pots and pans… the smell of my mother's strong coffee filled the air.
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Proverb or saying — Open with a line that frames the story's theme. "A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step," I reminded myself as I stood at the gate.
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Action — Begin mid-event to create immediate momentum. I bolted out of my front door and jumped into my brother's car.
You can also combine these. A line of action followed by sharp dialogue, for example, creates both energy and character voice from the first sentence.
Annotated Examples
The stories below are annotated to show how each technique works in practice. Click any highlighted passage to see what the writer is doing and why it works.