A non-linear arc is like a story that doesn’t go straight from beginning to end, it takes twists and turns, just like your favorite toy when you shake it up.
Imagine you're reading a book about a robot who wants to fly. In a regular story, the robot tries, fails, then tries again and finally flies. That’s a linear arc, straight and simple.
But in a non-linear arc, maybe the robot starts by flying, then falls down, goes back to try walking, learns how to dance, and only later comes back to flying. It's like jumping between different parts of the story, it doesn’t follow one path.
Like a Playground
Think of a playground. If you go straight from the swings to the slide, that’s linear. But if you swing, then run to the sandbox, climb a ladder, and finally go down the slide, that's non-linear! You're having fun in different ways before getting to the end.
So a non-linear arc is just like that, it's a story (or adventure) that moves around instead of going straight.
Examples
- A movie where events happen out of order, like a puzzle.
- A book that jumps between different characters' perspectives.
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See also
- What are frame narratives?
- How Do You Define Story Vs Plot?
- What is Narrative arcs?
- What Makes a ‘Novel’ Different from a ‘Short Story’?
- What is a good story often dependent on?