Narrative
 techniques are methods and literary devices a writer uses to craft the 
elements of a story. They involve different narrative elements, 
including plot, perspective, style, character, theme and genre. You can 
apply different narrative techniques to most forms of writing, including
 literature, poetry, film and theater. 
 Narrative techniques can help writers craft engaging stories by 
determining effective strategies to communicate information to readers. 
It's important to learn varied examples of techniques so you can decide 
which option can aid your writing efforts. In this article, we define 
what narrative techniques are and list 26 narrative techniques that you 
can use in your writing.
 26 narrative techniques for writers
Here's a list of 26 narrative techniques for writers to consider:
1. Use the setting
Many
 writers create settings that reflect a character's mood or 
circumstances. You can also use a setting to impact a character's 
decision-making process, making it an active component of a story's 
conflict. Consider novels in the gothic genre, which sometimes describe 
gloomy castles and characters with a corresponding dour personality. By 
defining certain traits of the castle setting, like a hallway that's 
always cold, you can reveal many aspects of a character's defining 
traits.
2. Create foreshadowing
Foreshadowing
 is a way to provide hints about events in a story before they happen. 
Writers often use foreshadowing to add an element of tension and emotion
 to their stories, as readers may recognize the event and continue 
reading to see if they're correct. You can also include foreshadowing to
 give a story an ominous tone, depending on its genre.
3. Include sensory imagery
Writers
 often use sensory imagery to create all the visuals of a scene using 
only words. This technique can help a reader understand a scene's varied
 elements, allowing them to understand a physical environment. For 
instance, a scene that takes place in a grocery store might include 
details about voices a character hears on the loudspeaker or the food 
they smell, taste, see and touch while they shop.
4. Provide a "cliffhanger"
A
 cliffhanger describes an ending of a story that withholds information 
about how a narrative resolves. It often suggests multiple ways a story 
could resolve, which allows readers to speculate about their preferred 
ending. Writers sometimes include cliffhangers to generate excitement 
about the next installment of a story. For instance, a television season
 might end before a character decides who to marry.
5. Change the chronology
Some
 writers use a flashback or flash-forward to include relevant 
experiences from a character's past or future. Adding a scene about a 
past event can reveal why a character takes certain actions in the 
present timeline of a story. Incorporating a future event can provide 
dramatic irony, which occurs when a reader learns how a story ends 
before the characters do.
6. Choose a point of view
Point
 of view typically describes who narrates a story's events. Writers 
typically choose a perspective that best conveys the information they 
prefer readers to know versus what they prefer to obscure. For example, a
 first-person narrative only reveals the motivations of one character. A
 third-person point of view uses she, he or they pronouns, revealing the
 observations of many characters while the narrator exists outside of 
the story entirely.
7. Incorporate character voice
Character
 voice is the particular way a character expresses themselves in their 
inner monologue or to others in a story. You can reveal a character's 
voice through their personality traits,
 dialogue and narration. Writers often develop a character's voice to 
affect how a reader interprets their actions and to give the story a 
tone. They may also include this technique to help readers distinguish 
one character from another.
8. Use symbolism
Symbolism
 is the use of objects or words to represent an abstract concept or 
mood. Writers often incorporate symbols in a story to develop its core 
themes and add another emotional element. For instance, a character 
might see a certain type of weather pattern whenever they process their 
relationship with another character. As a result, you could describe 
that weather pattern as a symbol for the relationship overall.
9. Create an unreliable narrator
Unreliable
 narrators are typically characters who deliberately omit information 
from a reader. They may conceal information, unconsciously hide elements
 because of circumstances in their character arc or lack knowledge of 
certain details. Writers often use an unreliable narrator to create 
tension and suspense in a story.
10. Involve readers in the story
Some
 writers incorporate readers in the narrative of a text. For instance, 
characters may know they're in a work of fiction or display an 
understanding that readers are currently observing their actions. As a 
result, they can address readers directly in narration or dialogue as an
 invisible character in a text. Depending on your preferences, you can 
have a reader's involvement affect the plot's overall arc.
11. Record a stream of consciousness
Stream
 of consciousness is a method of conveying the immediate thoughts and 
perceptions of a central character moving through a scene. It typically 
involves long sentences and focuses more heavily on a character's 
emotions than a sequence of plot points. Writers often use 
stream-of-consciousness descriptions to explore how a character 
processes sensory information. You can also use this method to write 
nonlinear stories, as a person's immediate thoughts often involve memory
 recall.
12. Personify an animal character
Personification
 is a technique for applying the qualities of one entity to another. 
Writers often personify animals by giving them the attributes of humans,
 allowing them to have human motivations and language abilities. Many 
fable and fairy tale writers personify animals to give the story a 
fantastic style and tone. You can also personify animals to encourage 
readers to connect with them emotionally.
13. Include big surprises in a plot
Often
 referred to as a plot twist, some writers introduce an unforeseen event
 in a story that dramatically alters the narrative. Writers often 
include plot twists to add a dramatic element and adjust a reader's 
expectations. For example, consider a character trying to find their 
family. At a climactic moment, they learn that a supporting character 
they've known since the beginning of the plot is secretly their 
relative, which changes the focus of their narrative arc.
14. Make a satire or parody
Satire
 uses humor to make social commentary. You can use literary devices such
 as exaggeration and irony to make commentary about a person or a 
situation. Parody is a similar technique that involves imitation of a 
writer's style or a genre that exaggerates features for a comedic 
effect. For instance, a parody of a popular celebrity may involve 
exaggerating their mannerisms.
15. Compose a metaphor
Metaphors
 are a type of figurative language that describes s omething by 
referring to something else. When writing a metaphor, you typically 
describe one emotion, object or concept as another to create a 
connection between them and add imagery. For instance, consider the 
phrase, "Love is an ocean." Equating these terms can allow readers to consider their similarities in new ways.
16. Include a simile
Similes
 are another type of figurative language that makes direct comparisons 
between objects or concepts. You can usually differentiate a similar 
from a metaphor by observing whether it uses the words like or as to 
describe a comparison. Using the elements from the metaphor above, an 
example of a simile might be, "Love is like an ocean."
17. Resolve your plot neatly
Writers
 sometimes resolve conflicts in a plot using an unanticipated event, 
object or character technique. This technique helps you provide a 
simple, clarified ending to a story. For instance, consider a play with a
 conflict between two siblings about who should inherit land from a 
relative. An ending using this technique might involve that relative 
appearing in the last scene to decide for them.
18. Write a narrative-within-a-narrative
Some
 writers have a character tell a story within a larger, encompassing 
one. Writers often use this technique to comment on storytelling as a 
practice. For instance, you might have characters introduce a 
narrative-within-a-narrative at the beginning of a story, write this 
full narrative in the middle, then bring the original characters back to
 discuss it at the end.
19. Start in the middle of a story
Some
 writers begin their story in the middle of the plot's events, meaning 
the reader knows very little about the central conflict before it 
starts. To reveal a backstory, they often include hints through dialogue
 and narration. You can use this technique to add urgency to a story, 
which may increase a reader's sense of suspense.
20. Use a hyperbole
Hyperbole
 is a style technique involving an intense exaggeration to convey a 
fact. Writers often include hyperbole to emphasize these statements to 
readers, offering them more clarity about a situation or its emotional 
relevance. Consider the hyperbole, "I
 walked a thousand miles" spoken by a character who lacks this 
capability. Including it may help readers comprehend how this character 
reacted to this situation.
21. Design an author surrogate
Some
 writers include a character to represent themselves. They're typically 
the narrator, which allows a writer to comment on a story's events. You 
can also use this technique to write a fictional character whose traits 
and backstory directly parallel events from your life. Another option 
involves giving yourself alternate traits to learn how you might behave 
in certain situations, like a setting from science fiction.
22. Construct an allegory
An
 allegory is a story that represents a larger idea or event from a 
society that actually exists. Writers sometimes use an allegory to share
 their perspective on that larger idea or event covertly instead of 
directly stating their opinion. For example, consider a story about a 
child looking for a lost item by talking to their neighbors. This might 
be an allegory for humans who look for a purpose in life through other 
people.
23. Use alliteration
Alliteration
 is a technique for grouping similar letters or sounds in one sentence. 
Writers use alliteration to emphasize a particular phrase or to create 
memorable lines. An example of alliteration is "Damien dared Julia to 
stand on the river dam." The words "Damien" and "dared "begin with the 
same letter, while the words "stand" and "dam" have the same beginning 
consonant sound.
24. Involve a "Red herring"
A
 red herring is a technique for presenting misleading information that 
directs a character away from an important concept or fact. Writers 
often use red herrings in mystery novels to frame one character as a 
likely suspect while another character is the actual culprit. You can 
also use them to mislead readers about a certain aspect of a plot or 
character to add an element of surprise to a story.
25. Try the cut-up method
The
 cut-up method is a technique where you remove individual words or 
sentences from a written text to create something new. You can use it to
 comment on an original piece or alter its context. For instance, you 
use scissors to separate words from a newspaper article and reuse them 
in a poem about the content of that article.
26. Add defamiliarization
Defamiliarization
 is a technique where a writer describes a common situation using 
uncommon descriptions. You can use this technique to examine aspects of 
daily life in a particular society to help readers develop a new 
perspective. For example, you could describe a character who observes 
pet one day and thinks about what it means to share a life with a 
non-human creature who communicates in different ways.