Master the art of raising stakes in fiction writing. Learn the proven framework for creating urgency, amplifying consequences, and making every scene matter to readers from first page to last.
Why Your Novel Feels Flat (Even When Things Are Happening)
Your protagonist is racing through a burning building. Explosions rock the foundations. Enemies close in from all sides. Danger lurks around every corner.
And somehow… your reader is bored.
Or consider this: Your protagonist is sitting quietly at a kitchen table having a conversation with their estranged parent. No explosions. No chase scenes. No physical danger whatsoever.
And readers are on the edge of their seats, heart pounding.
What’s the difference?
It’s not about the size of the action or the volume of the chaos. It’s about stakes—what hangs in the balance, what could be lost or gained, and why any of it matters to the character experiencing it.
“Raise the stakes” ranks alongside “show don’t tell” as one of the most frequently repeated yet fundamentally misunderstood pieces of writing advice. Writers hear it constantly:
“The manuscript has potential, but you need to raise the stakes.”
“The pacing is fine, but the stakes feel low.”
“I didn’t feel invested because the stakes weren’t clear.”
But what does “raising the stakes” actually mean? And more importantly, how do you do it without turning every novel into a world-ending apocalypse scenario?
This guide breaks down stakes from first principles, showing you exactly how to make readers care desperately about what happens in your story—whether you’re writing intimate character studies or epic space operas.
Understanding Stakes: What’s Actually at Risk?
Defining Stakes in Simple Terms
Stakes = What the character stands to gain or lose based on the outcome of events
Think of stakes as the answer to two fundamental questions:
- If my character succeeds, what happens? (The reward)
- If my character fails, what happens? (The consequence)
The gap between these outcomes—how much better or worse things could be—determines the intensity of your stakes.
Low stakes gap:
- Success: Gets a good grade
- Failure: Gets a mediocre grade
High stakes gap:
- Success: Gets scholarship that enables college attendance and escapes poverty
- Failure: Can’t attend college, stuck in cycle of poverty that trapped parents
Same surface event (getting a grade), radically different stakes based on what hangs in the balance.
Why Stakes Matter More Than Plot
You can have the most intricate plot in the world—conspiracies, betrayals, revelations, twists—but if readers don’t understand what’s at risk, they won’t care about any of it.
Stakes are the emotional engine of your novel. They’re what transform events from “stuff happening” into “story that matters.”
Without clear stakes:
- Events feel arbitrary
- Character choices seem unmotivated
- Readers remain emotionally distant
- Tension evaporates despite action
- The novel feels pointless
With clear, elevated stakes:
- Every event carries weight
- Character choices feel urgent and meaningful
- Readers become emotionally invested
- Tension builds naturally
- The novel feels significant
The Two-Question Framework
Before you can raise stakes, you need to establish them. For every major scene and for the novel overall, you should be able to clearly answer:
Question 1: What does my character believe will happen if they succeed?
Not just abstract “things will be better,” but specific, visualizable outcomes:
- “I’ll have enough money to afford my daughter’s surgery”
- “My father will finally respect me”
- “I’ll prove I’m not the failure everyone thinks I am”
- “We’ll live in a world without this tyranny”
Question 2: What does my character fear will happen if they fail?
Again, specific and concrete:
- “My daughter dies because I couldn’t save her”
- “My father’s last memory of me will be disappointment”
- “I’ll have confirmed that I am exactly the failure they always believed”
- “This tyranny will destroy everything I love”
If you can’t answer both questions specifically for your protagonist in a given scene, your stakes are probably unclear or absent.
The Foundation: Characters Must Want Something
The Passive Protagonist Problem
Here’s a pattern I see constantly in struggling manuscripts:
Exciting things happen. Characters react to circumstances. Chaos unfolds. Readers remain uninvested.
The missing ingredient? Active desire.
When characters don’t want anything specific, readers have no emotional north star. We don’t know what to hope for or fear. We’re watching events happen TO someone rather than experiencing a journey WITH someone.
The psychological principle: Humans are goal-oriented creatures. We unconsciously adopt the goals of people we observe. When your protagonist wants something clearly, readers begin wanting it too. When your protagonist has no clear desire, readers feel adrift.
The Universal Want Principle
Every major character in your novel should want something.
Not just your protagonist—everyone. And critically, their wants should often conflict, creating the friction that generates story.
For each major character, you should know:
Macro level (novel-spanning wants):
- What they want from life overall
- What they believe will bring fulfillment/happiness
- What they fear will destroy them
Micro level (scene-by-scene wants):
- What they want to accomplish in this specific scene
- How it connects to their larger goals
- What they’re risking in pursuit of it
Example: The Hunger Games
Katniss’s wants:
- Macro: Protect Prim, survive, maintain her identity
- Scene-level (training): Impress sponsors without revealing full abilities
- Scene-level (arena): Find water without being tracked
Peeta’s wants:
- Macro: Win Katniss’s genuine affection, maintain his integrity
- Scene-level (train): Protect Katniss even from distance
- Scene-level (arena): Save Katniss’s life, even at cost of his own
President Snow’s wants:
- Macro: Maintain control of Panem through fear
- Scene-level: Design Games that entertain while crushing hope
Notice how these wants create natural conflict—Katniss wants to survive alone; Peeta wants to protect her. Snow wants submission; Katniss embodies defiance. Conflict emerges organically from competing desires.
Making Wants Clear to Readers
Your characters’ wants can be:
Explicit: Stated directly through dialogue or internal monologue “I want to learn the ways of the Force and become a Jedi like my father.” —Luke Skywalker
Implicit: Shown through consistent choices and behavior Katniss never says “I want to protect Prim,” but every choice proves it.
Discovered: Character realizes what they truly want through the journey Many romance protagonists initially think they want one thing (career success, independence) but discover they want connection more.
The key: However you establish wants, readers must understand them. If beta readers can’t articulate what your protagonist wants and why, your stakes will feel unclear no matter how you try to raise them.
The Two Dimensions of Stakes: Personal and External
Why Scale Alone Doesn’t Create Stakes
Common misconception: Bigger consequences = higher stakes.
Reality: Personal investment + meaningful consequences = high stakes, regardless of scale.
Proof:
Scenario A: Alien invasion threatens to destroy Earth. Protagonist is random soldier who has no personal connection to anyone, no dreams beyond survival, no internal conflicts.
Stakes feel: Moderately low despite huge scale
Scenario B: Protagonist’s estranged father is dying. They have 48 hours to decide whether to see him before he dies, knowing this means confronting painful childhood trauma.
Stakes feel: Extremely high despite intimate scale
Why? Scenario B connects the outcome to the protagonist’s identity, relationships, and emotional wounds. Scenario A is just spectacle without personal meaning.
Personal Stakes: Why It Matters to the Character
Personal stakes answer: “What does this mean for my character’s identity, relationships, values, or emotional well-being?”
Types of personal stakes:
Identity stakes: “If I fail, I confirm I’m the person I’ve always feared I am.”
- The Silent Patient: Theo’s obsession with Alicia tied to his need to prove his therapeutic approach works, validating his entire professional identity
Relationship stakes: “If I fail, I lose the people who matter most.”
- The Kite Runner: Amir’s quest tied to redemption for betraying Hassan, the brother-figure he loved
Values stakes: “If I fail, I betray what I believe in most deeply.”
- To Kill a Mockingbird: Atticus defending Tom Robinson despite social costs because integrity matters more than acceptance
Psychological stakes: “If I fail, I’ll be destroyed emotionally/mentally.”
- The Midnight Library: Nora’s exploration of alternate lives stakes are literally life vs. death, but also meaning vs. meaninglessness
Redemption stakes: “If I succeed, I can atone for past failures.”
- A Man Called Ove: Ove’s journey toward finding purpose again after loss and failure
External Stakes: Impact on the Broader World
External stakes answer: “How does the outcome affect people beyond my protagonist?”
Types of external stakes:
Physical survival stakes: Lives hang in the balance
- The Hunger Games: Katniss’s survival, Peeta’s survival, district tributes
Social/Community stakes: Groups of people affected
- Where the Crawdads Sing: Whether Kya is convicted affects how society treats outsiders
Political stakes: Power structures and governance
- The Hunger Games: Capitol control vs. district rebellion
Environmental stakes: The world itself threatened
- The Fifth Season: Stopping world-ending seismic events
Moral/Ethical stakes: Questions about right and wrong
- The Underground Railroad: Individual escape representing larger questions about freedom and justice
The Convergence Principle
The most powerful stakes combine personal and external dimensions.
Example: The Hunger Games
External stakes:
- Physical: Katniss and 23 tributes’ survival
- Political: Maintaining Capitol control vs. sparking rebellion
- Social: How districts view themselves and possibilities
Personal stakes:
- Identity: Can Katniss maintain her humanity while killing?
- Relationship: Her connection to Prim, Gale, Peeta
- Values: Survival instinct vs. compassion for others
- Psychological: Trauma and loss of innocence
The berry scene isn’t powerful just because lives hang in the balance (external). It’s devastating because Katniss is choosing between survival and humanity, between self-interest and protecting someone she’s come to care about (personal).
When external and personal stakes converge, readers feel the full weight of what hangs in the balance.
How to Raise Stakes: Eight Proven Techniques
Technique 1: Connect Events to Character Identity
The principle: If the outcome will fundamentally change how your character sees themselves, stakes skyrocket.
Before (lower stakes): “If I don’t get this promotion, I’ll have less money.”
After (higher stakes): “If I don’t get this promotion, I’ll prove my father right—I am the failure he always said I’d be. I’ll have wasted a decade trying to become someone worthy of love, only to confirm I never was.”
Contemporary example: Educated by Tara Westover
Tara’s stakes aren’t just “get an education.” They’re:
- Identity: Proving she’s more than her family’s definition of her
- Values: Choosing truth and knowledge over loyalty to family
- Psychological: Risk of losing her entire family and identity foundation
Every choice carries identity-level consequences, making even quiet moments intensely high-stakes.
Application technique:
For your protagonist, identify:
- How they currently see themselves
- How they fear being seen
- How they hope to be seen
Then connect your plot’s success/failure to reinforcing or destroying these self-perceptions.
Technique 2: Show Who Else Will Be Affected
The principle: Humanizing the collateral damage of failure raises stakes by multiplying the people readers care about.
Before (lower stakes): “If I fail to stop the villain, people will die.”
After (higher stakes): “If I fail to stop the villain, Marcus—the coffee shop owner who remembers my order and asks about my mom—will die. So will his daughter, who just turned six and wants to be an astronaut. So will the cranky neighbor who always complains but secretly leaves food for stray cats.”
Contemporary example: Anxious People by Fredrik Backman
What could be a generic hostage thriller becomes emotionally devastating because Backman makes readers care about every single person in that apartment—their struggles, hopes, kindnesses, and pain. When danger threatens them, we’re invested in all their fates.
Application technique:
Instead of abstract groups (“innocent civilians”), show readers specific people who will suffer:
- Give them names and details
- Show their own hopes and fears
- Let protagonist interact with them
- Reveal what they’ll lose
Technique 3: Sharpen the Cost of Failure
The principle: Vague consequences feel abstract. Specific, devastating consequences feel urgent.
Before (lower stakes): “If I fail, things will be bad.”
After (higher stakes): “If I fail, I’ll watch my sister die slowly from the disease I could have prevented. She’ll ask me why I didn’t save her, and I won’t have an answer. I’ll spend the rest of my life knowing I chose my own comfort over her life.”
Contemporary example: The Silent Patient
The cost of Theo failing to make Alicia speak isn’t just professional disappointment. It’s:
- Career destruction (his reputation hinges on this)
- Marriage collapse (his obsession is destroying his relationship)
- Identity devastation (his entire therapeutic philosophy disproven)
- Psychological breakdown (his guilt and obsession consuming him)
Application technique:
For every major goal, ask:
- What’s the specific worst-case scenario?
- Who specifically gets hurt?
- What does the protagonist lose forever?
- What does failure prove about them?
- What becomes impossible if they fail?
Technique 4: Boost the Reward
The principle: A bigger, more meaningful reward increases what characters will risk to achieve it.
Before (lower stakes): “If I succeed, I’ll be happy.”
After (higher stakes): “If I succeed, my mother will walk again. I’ll watch her climb the stairs to her childhood bedroom one more time before she dies. She’ll see the garden she planted forty years ago from the window she hasn’t reached in a decade. I’ll give her that gift.”
Contemporary example: The Kite Runner
The reward for Amir rescuing Sohrab isn’t just “help a kid.” It’s:
- Redemption for his betrayal of Hassan
- Honoring Hassan’s memory and their brotherhood
- Breaking the cycle of cowardice and guilt
- Becoming the man his father wanted him to be
- Finding peace after decades of shame
Application technique:
Make rewards:
- Specific and visualizable
- Connected to character’s deepest desires
- Meaningful beyond surface accomplishment
- Worth significant sacrifice
Technique 5: Increase Physical Danger
The principle: Physical peril is the most visceral form of stakes—survival is always relevant.
But add specificity:
Generic danger (lower impact): “The building is burning.”
Specific danger (higher impact): “The building is burning, and Emma is trapped on the fourth floor in the therapy room where she’s treated PTSD patients for fifteen years. The smoke is filling her lungs—the same sensation that paralyzed her during her last panic attack. She can hear sirens but knows from her firefighter husband that they’re six minutes away. She has three.”
Contemporary example: The Martian
Mark Watney faces constant physical danger (starvation, oxygen depletion, equipment failure), but each is made specific:
- Exact number of days food will last
- Precise calculations of oxygen levels
- Detailed equipment failure consequences
- Real-time problem-solving with lives on the line
Application technique:
When adding physical danger:
- Be specific about the threat
- Give concrete time constraints
- Show exact failure consequences
- Connect to character’s specific fears
- Make survival uncertain
Technique 6: Create Deadlines
The principle: Limited time compresses stakes by removing the option to delay, reconsider, or try again.
Types of deadlines:
Literal ticking clock: “The bomb detonates in 60 minutes.”
Biological deadline: “The poison will kill him in 12 hours without antidote.”
Circumstantial deadline: “The court decision happens tomorrow.”
Relational deadline: “She’s leaving at dawn. This is my last chance.”
Contemporary example: Before I Fall by Lauren Oliver
Samantha has exactly one day (repeated) to figure out how to break the cycle. Each repetition is a deadline, forcing choices without the luxury of more time.
Application technique:
Add deadlines to:
- Force decisions before character is ready
- Eliminate comfortable options
- Create urgency in otherwise slow plots
- Prevent protagonist from avoiding conflict
Technique 7: Strengthen Opposition
The principle: If victory is guaranteed, stakes feel low. If failure seems likely, stakes soar.
Before (lower stakes): Villain is incompetent, easily outwitted.
After (higher stakes): Villain is smarter than protagonist, has more resources, knows protagonist’s weaknesses, and stays three steps ahead. Victory requires everything protagonist has plus luck they don’t yet have.
Contemporary example: Gone Girl
Amy is a terrifyingly competent antagonist:
- Smarter than Nick (and readers)
- Meticulously prepared
- Understands psychology deeply
- Always three moves ahead
- Willing to sacrifice anything
This makes Nick’s situation genuinely hopeless, raising stakes to maximum.
Application technique:
Make antagonists (internal or external):
- More intelligent or capable than expected
- Better resourced than protagonist
- One step ahead consistently
- Targeting protagonist’s specific vulnerabilities
- Morally complex (not just evil for evil’s sake)
Technique 8: Broaden the Canvas
The principle: Connect individual outcomes to larger consequences affecting many people or the world itself.
Before (lower stakes): “If I solve this murder, justice is served.”
After (higher stakes): “If I solve this murder, I expose a trafficking ring that’s taken dozens of children. I give those families answers they’ve waited years for. I prove the system failed them, forcing change. And I show my own daughter that fighting for justice—even when it costs you everything—matters.”
Contemporary example: The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas
Starr’s decision to testify isn’t just about one incident. It’s about:
- Justice for Khalil specifically
- Exposing systemic police violence
- Giving voice to her community
- Challenging code-switching and silence
- Inspiring others to speak up
- Changing how her children’s generation experiences the world
Application technique:
Connect individual outcomes to:
- Community impact (others facing similar situations)
- Systemic change (fixing broken institutions)
- Cultural shift (changing how society thinks)
- Precedent setting (affecting future cases)
- Symbolic meaning (representing larger truths)
Stakes Across Different Genres
Literary Fiction: Intimate Stakes at Maximum Intensity
Common misconception: Literary fiction has lower stakes than genre fiction.
Reality: Literary fiction often features incredibly high stakes—they’re just predominantly personal rather than external.
Example: Normal People by Sally Rooney
No one dies. No world-ending threats. But the stakes—whether Connell and Marianne can overcome their damage and fear to choose each other—feel devastatingly high because Rooney makes readers care deeply about both characters’ emotional survival.
Literary fiction stake strategies:
- Psychological stakes over physical
- Identity and self-understanding at risk
- Relationship dynamics as life-or-death emotional terrain
- Past trauma consequences in present
- Questions of meaning and purpose
Romance: Stakes of Vulnerability and Belonging
Core stakes: Will these people risk emotional vulnerability to find love, or will fear keep them isolated?
Raising romance stakes:
- Past heartbreak making vulnerability terrifying
- External circumstances threatening relationship
- Internal wounds blocking intimacy
- Misunderstandings with devastating consequences
- Sacrifices required for love
Example: The Hating Game
Lucy and Josh’s stakes:
- Professional: Job security, respect, promotion
- Emotional: Risk heartbreak vs. stay safe but lonely
- Identity: Admitting feelings means admitting vulnerability
- Past wounds: Both carrying relationship trauma
Mystery/Thriller: Escalating Danger Stakes
Core stakes: Physical survival, justice, truth vs. lies
Raising mystery/thriller stakes:
- Personal connection to victim/crime
- Protagonist’s life endangered by investigation
- Deadline before another victim
- Corruption in trusted institutions
- Truth that destroys relationships
Example: The Silent Patient
Layered stakes:
- Literal: Alicia’s life and freedom
- Professional: Theo’s career
- Psychological: Both characters’ sanity
- Relational: Multiple relationships endangered
- Moral: Justice vs. self-protection
Fantasy/Science Fiction: World-Level Plus Personal Stakes
Common trap: Focusing only on “save the world” without personal stakes
Solution: Ground world-level stakes in personal consequences
Example: The Fifth Season by N.K. Jemisin
World-ending stakes (apocalyptic seismic events) combined with:
- Essun’s quest to find her kidnapped daughter
- Identity questions about being orogene in oppressive society
- Relationship dynamics between oppressor and oppressed
- Personal grief over loss
Raising fantasy/sci-fi stakes:
- Connect world-saving to personal loss
- Show specific people affected by large-scale events
- Give protagonist personal reasons beyond duty
- Create internal conflicts about methods/costs
Common Stakes Mistakes (And How to Fix Them)
Mistake 1: Vague, Abstract Stakes
The problem: “Everything is at risk” without specifics feels like nothing is at risk.
Why it fails: Human brains need concrete, visualizable consequences to generate emotion.
The fix:
Before: “If I fail, things will be terrible.”
After: “If I fail, I’ll watch my daughter grow up believing her mother abandoned her rather than died protecting her. She’ll search for me in crowds. She’ll wonder what she did to make me leave. She’ll never know I loved her.”
Mistake 2: Stakes Only Introduced at Climax
The problem: If we don’t understand stakes until the end, we haven’t been invested throughout.
Why it fails: Stakes need to be established early and escalated progressively for maximum impact.
The fix:
- Establish basic stakes in first act
- Layer additional stakes in second act
- Converge and heighten all stakes in third act
Mistake 3: Protagonist Doesn’t Seem to Care
The problem: Stakes exist on paper but protagonist’s behavior doesn’t reflect urgency.
Why it fails: If the character doesn’t care, readers won’t either.
The fix:
- Show protagonist thinking about stakes constantly
- Have stakes affect protagonist’s choices in every scene
- Demonstrate what protagonist is willing to sacrifice
- Show emotional weight through behavior
Mistake 4: Stakes Deflate Instead of Escalate
The problem: Early obstacles feel more dangerous than later ones.
Why it fails: Readers expect escalation. When stakes shrink, interest evaporates.
The fix:
- Map stakes throughout novel
- Ensure each major plot point raises stakes higher
- Climax should feature highest stakes of all
- Never resolve stakes then introduce new unrelated ones
Mistake 5: Only External Stakes (Or Only Personal)
The problem: Missing either personal or external dimension weakens impact.
Why it fails: Personal stakes without external feel navel-gazing; external without personal feel impersonal.
The fix:
- Identify both dimensions of stakes in your story
- Strengthen whichever is weaker
- Find ways to connect external events to personal meaning
- Show how personal struggles affect broader world
Mistake 6: Consequences That Don’t Matter
The problem: Protagonist could fail without real consequences, so tension evaporates.
Why it fails: If failure is acceptable or easily recovered from, urgency disappears.
The fix:
- Make failure devastating and permanent
- Show exactly what’s lost forever
- Eliminate easy outs or backup plans
- Force protagonist to accept real risks
The Stakes Escalation Map: Planning Your Novel
Pre-Writing Stakes Planning
Before writing, map out stakes escalation:
Act I (25% of novel):
- Establish baseline stakes: What protagonist wants and why
- Introduce complications that raise stakes slightly
- Show what failure would mean currently
Act II, First Half (25%):
- Add new dimension to stakes (broaden canvas or deepen personal meaning)
- Increase difficulty of success
- Show partial failures that preview full failure
Act II, Second Half (25%):
- Converge multiple stake dimensions
- Remove safety nets and backup plans
- Force protagonist to risk more than comfortable
- Show the true cost of failure
Act III (25%):
- All stakes at maximum
- Success and failure both seem possible
- Multiple stake dimensions at risk simultaneously
- Outcome determines everything
Scene-Level Stakes Check
For every major scene, ask:
- [ ] What does protagonist want in this scene?
- [ ] What happens if they get it?
- [ ] What happens if they don’t?
- [ ] Why does this scene’s outcome matter to larger novel?
- [ ] Could this scene be cut without affecting stakes? (If yes, cut it or strengthen it)
Real-World Application: Raising Stakes Exercise
Take Your Current Manuscript Through This Process:
Step 1: Identify Current Stakes
Write down:
- What your protagonist wants (macro)
- What happens if they succeed
- What happens if they fail
- Why they personally care
Step 2: Apply the Two-Dimension Test
Personal stakes (internal): How does outcome affect protagonist’s:
- Identity
- Relationships
- Values
- Psychology
External stakes (outside protagonist): How does outcome affect:
- Other characters
- Community
- Society
- The world
Step 3: Strengthen Weak Dimensions
Which dimension is weaker? Apply relevant techniques:
If personal stakes are weak:
- Connect to identity (Technique 1)
- Boost meaningful reward (Technique 4)
- Sharpen personal cost (Technique 3)
If external stakes are weak:
- Show affected people (Technique 2)
- Broaden canvas (Technique 8)
- Increase danger (Technique 5)
Step 4: Map Escalation
Chart how stakes increase from beginning to end:
- Are they progressively rising?
- Does anything deflate stakes mid-novel?
- Do stakes peak at climax?
Step 5: Make Stakes Clear to Readers
Review opening chapters:
- Do readers understand what protagonist wants by page 30?
- Are consequences of success/failure clear?
- Has protagonist behavior demonstrated stakes matter to them?
Frequently Asked Questions: Raising Stakes
Don’t high stakes require life-or-death situations?
No. High stakes mean high personal investment + meaningful consequences. A conversation between estranged family members can have incredibly high stakes if relationship reconciliation means everything to the protagonist.
How do I raise stakes without making everything melodramatic?
Focus on authentic emotional stakes. Not everything needs explosions—sometimes the stakes are “will I finally tell my father I love him before it’s too late.” That can be devastating without being melodramatic.
What if my novel is literary fiction about quiet life events?
Literary fiction often features incredibly high stakes—they’re just predominantly internal. Identity formation, relationship dynamics, meaning-making, and psychological survival can all carry maximum stakes.
Can stakes be too high?
Yes—if they’re not earned. World-ending stakes without proper buildup feel inflated and false. Build progressively, and ensure stakes match what you’ve established in your novel’s world.
Do subplots need separate stakes?
Yes. Every plot thread should have its own stakes that ideally connect to or complicate the main plot stakes. Subplot stakes are typically lower but still meaningful.
How do I know if my stakes are high enough?
Beta reader feedback is crucial. Ask: “What did you think was at risk?” and “How much did you care whether the protagonist succeeded?” If they can’t answer clearly or don’t express strong feelings, your stakes need work.
What about series—can I save some stakes for later books?
Each book needs complete stakes for that book’s arc, even if larger series stakes continue. Readers should feel satisfied with each book’s stakes resolution while anticipating series continuation.
Your Action Plan: Implementing Higher Stakes
This week:
- For your current project, write down: “My protagonist wants ____ because ____. If they succeed, ____ happens. If they fail, ____ happens.”
- If you struggle to complete that sentence specifically, your stakes need clarification
- Share this sentence with a trusted reader—do they care about the outcome?
This month:
- Map stakes escalation throughout your novel
- Identify which dimension (personal or external) is weaker
- Apply 2-3 techniques from this guide to strengthen stakes
- Revise key scenes to reflect heightened stakes
This revision: Audit every major scene for stakes clarity. Ask:
- Is it clear what’s at risk here?
- Does the protagonist’s behavior reflect that stakes matter?
- Are consequences specific and devastating?
- Do stakes connect to larger novel arc?
The most common reason novels feel flat isn’t bad writing—it’s unclear or insufficiently high stakes. When readers know exactly what hangs in the balance and care deeply about the outcome, they’ll follow your protagonist through any journey.
You now have the complete framework for making every scene, every chapter, and every choice in your novel matter deeply to readers.








