Tale Spinning

A Story-Structure Method

GlossaryStructure

The Circle

The Circle is the structural shape of a story: eight sequences arranged in a ring, where each first-half sequence mirrors its second-half partner.

Applies to
All story types

The Circle


Definition

The structural shape of the story. Eight sequences (A, B, C, D, AA, BB, CC, DD) arranged in a circle, with Heaven on Earth at the top serving as both the beginning point (Transition Scene 1) and the ending. The Protagonist moves clockwise through all eight sequences. Each sequence on the left side of the Circle mirrors its partner on the right.

Why This Term Matters

Most structural frameworks are linear: Act 1, Act 2, Act 3. The Circle is not. It is circular by design — the story ends where it began, or rather, where it was always trying to go. Heaven on Earth is the destination, but it is also the origin point. This shapes how the story feels: not like a journey from A to B, but like a return. The Protagonist was always trying to get back to something — they just did not know what it was until the end.

The Circle also makes mirroring explicit. Sequence B and Sequence BB are structural partners. What the Protagonist builds in B, they risk losing in BB. What the Referee establishes in C, the Judge adjudicates in CC. This gives writers a diagnostic tool: if a sequence in the second half feels weak, look at its partner in the first half and ask what the mirrored version of that scene should be.

The Eight Sequences

The Circle is divided into two halves of four sequences each:

First half (the King’s Law half):

  • Sequence A — the Home World; the Habit is established; the King and King’s Law are introduced
  • Sequence B — entry into the Strange World; the partnership with the Muse begins; the Genie is formed
  • Sequence C — the Referee appears; the McGuffin is made official; the competition begins
  • Sequence D — the battle for the McGuffin; the Protagonist wins using the Habit and the Genie

Second half (the Universe’s Law half, mirroring the first):

  • Sequence AA — the Home World pulls the Protagonist back; the Habit reasserts
  • Sequence BB — the partnership with the Muse cracks; the Genie is threatened
  • Sequence CC — the Judge appears; the Genie is removed; the Protagonist must choose
  • Sequence DD — the Protagonist sheds the Habit; Heaven on Earth is reached

Transition Scenes

Between each sequence is a Transition Scene — a decision moment. Six of the eight are active choices made by the Protagonist. Two are rewards: the Midpoint (winning the McGuffin at the bottom of the Circle) and Heaven on Earth (at the top).

In a Tragedy

Coming soon.


Learn More

The Circle is the structural backbone of the Kind Comedy Course on learn.tale-spinning.com, taught with full sequence-by-sequence breakdowns of Ratatouille and In Bruges. It is introduced in the free Fundamentals Course.