If I were to stack up all the craft books I've bought over the years they would probably reach the ceiling of my office. If I were to stack up just the ones I found useful, they wouldn't be enough to prop a window open on a hot day. Suffice it to say, I'm doubtful there are any novel writing models I haven't heard of, or bought a book about, or attempted in one form or another. Hello, my name is Sebastien, and I'm a writing how-to book addict.
For those interested in such things, the ones I've found genuinely useful in my own practice have been Donald Maass's 'Writing 21st Century Fiction', Jeffrey Schechter's 'My Story Can Beat Up Your Story', John Truby's 'Anatomy of Story', Matt Bird's 'Secrets of Story' (never has one theory ever gotten so much mileage out of the concept of irony) and the umpteen Dramatica books and software editions out there (those starting out with Dramatica will do best by immersing themselves in NarrativeFirst.com which is filled with helpful avenues to enter the very deep and very dark cave that is Dramatica.)
That's not a lot of books. The vast majority of the others have either been fluff ('let your inner bluebird sing its song!') or rehashes of Syd Field's classic 'Screenplay' book only with a new unhelpful metaphor added ('Master the secrets of the Story Wrench!', 'Build your Story GPS: Goodly Powerful Story!', 'Story Psychopath: Unleash Your Inner Writer's Block Killer With The Power Of Neuroscience!') [As an aside, if you want to write your own 'writing how-to' book, just find the table of contents from any of the other ones, rename the chapters, come up with an idiotic metaphor for the title, and tell everyone to write in three acts. Don't forget to mention that the three acts are 'beginning, middle, and end'. Whoa!]
Okay, maybe this is turning into a little bit of a rant. Let me get back to this particular book.
Save The Cat! Writes a Novel by Jessica Brody is an unusual one for me to recommend. I'm not exactly a "save the cat" guy. First, it began as a screenwriting model and I'm a novelist by profession, second, like most screenwriting models (and every possible variant of 'the hero's journey') it fails to account for the length and complexity of novels, and third, loads of people in the business will loathe you for even bringing up Save The Cat. The argument goes that innumerable young screenwriters are following the formula so closely that they're putting out repetitive garbage (I suppose my own thought on that is that they were putting out loads of garbage long before Save The Cat came along, just as they were before and are now putting out plenty of amazing, rich stories as well.)
But here's the thing: none of that matters. What matters is if the model will help you get from "I could never write a book" to "Hey, look, here's my first novel." If there's one thing I'm passionate about in the world of writing it's that everyone has a book in them and writing that first book is an incredibly valuable experience regardless of whether it sells in exactly the same way that running your first marathon is an incredibly valuable experience whether or not you win the race. You run the marathon to make your body capable of new things, and you write the book to make your mind capable of new things. And here's where I think Jessica Brody's book comes into play: it's an excellent way to map out your first (or maybe seventeenth) novel and know that you're going to come to a satisfying conclusion at the end. She takes a writing model that tends to be convoluted and confusing by virtue of its bizarre terminology and yet makes it accessible, understandable, and practical.
If you just read the table of contents of most writing books, they all look as if they'll take you from beginning to end in twelve easy steps. The problem is, once you start reading them, you realize the explanation is mostly hyperbolically vague nonsense ('Now you'll really blow the reader's mind with your plot twist, by twisting the plot when they least expect it!'), their examples are almost entirely drawn from movies rather than books, and they only skim the very surface of each idea, favouring repetition over clarification and analysis. I can honestly say I never really understood all the beats in Save The Cat until I read Jessica's book – and that matters, because they're nowhere nearly as simple or obvious as they first seem. Something like the 'midpoint' seems simple – a turn at the middle of the book – but when you realize it's either the culmination of an upward (i.e. positive for the main character) trajectory or a negative one (and thus will dictate your direction in the third quarter of the book), the notion of the midpoint takes on a more sophisticated and actionable meaning. Oh, and while many if not most of Brody's examples have been made into movies, she's pulling from the actual books, which is much more helpful for novelists.
As a final note, Jessica Brody is, in fact, an accomplished and successful author in her own right. She doesn't write the kinds of books I read, but just reading sample chapters tells me she knows what she's doing, and given her works have been translated into a number of other languages and have done well for themselves shows that when she talks about writing commercially successful novels she's got the basis to back it up.
As to criticisms? Well, I'm not in love with the rah-rah style of the writing, nor am I likely to become a Save The Cat enthusiast since my brain doesn't quite work that way. But Brody actually delivers on what she promises and does it in a way that shows both expertise in her craft and compassion for her audience. Someone struggling to plot a novel can genuinely go through the book and come out the other side with a story that makes sense and has at least a decent chance of being satisfying to readers. Anyone who can help those who want to write but are fearful of making the journey reach the finish line is a hero in my book.
In case such things matter to anyone, I should point out that I don't know Jessica Brody personally and I paid for my copy of the book (twice, in fact – once on Amazon and once for my Kobo e-reader and I even bought her Udemy course).