Elements of Novel.
PLOT
A good plot makes the novel interesting and successful. The plot is the story's foundation. It has three parts: beginning, middle, and end. It progresses through the use of people, events, and actions. A plot and sub-plot may exist in a novel. However, these two do not operate independently. They become intertwined with the main theme at some point. Let us now look at an example from the novel ‘The Binding Vine’. The main plot revolves around Urmi's sadness over the death of her little daughter, while the subplots revolve around Mira and Kalpana, who are linked by the themes of human relationships and death.
The plot in a narrative work is the structure of its actions, as these are ordered towards achieving an artistic effect.
Aristotle classified plots into three types :
Simple Plot: A novel which runs on a single line story is called the novel with simple plot.
Complex Plot: A novel with a complicated narrative has one main story and one or more subsidiary stories. In this case, the subsidiary storylines help the primary plot develop faster and more interestingly.
Episodic Plot: A novel with episodic plot is one in which the events of the hero's life are told in a random manner with no logical relationship between them. This is the absolute worst kind of plot.
Plot has five fundamental components:
1. Introduction - The story's opening, when the characters and setting are introduced.
2. Rising Action - This is where the story's events become complex and the conflict becomes visible (events between the introduction and the climax).
3. Climax - This is the story's most interesting and crucial point. The reader is interested in what happens next; will the conflict be resolved?
4. Falling action - The events and complications begin to resolve themselves. The reader understands what happened next and whether or not the conflict was resolved (events between the climax and the denouement).
5. Denouement - This is the story's final outcome or untangling of events. It is beneficial to extract new information from the main character.
SETTING
A story cannot be written in vacuum. It emerges from and moves within a cultural setting. The socio-cultural matrix of the location and time governs the characters, events, motivations, and overall plot action. The author is unable to leave the environment he has created. Take, for instance, Anita Desai's 'Bye-Bye, Blackbird'. The characters are Indian, although they live in England.
For some stories, the setting is very important, while for others it is not. There are several aspects of a story's setting to consider when examining how setting contributes to a story (some, or all, may be present in a story):
1. Place - geographical location. Where is the action of the story taking place?
A novelist need not specifically mention the name of the place but the setting, the background and such other details provide ample clues to a generalized idea of place. R.K. Narayan's Malgudi novels, the tradition and culture is influenced through place. In the Gothic novels, place is used to create the atmosphere of horror.
2. Time - When is the story taking place? (historical period, time of day, year, etc)
The story may be set in the past, present, or future. The novelist has to conform to the social, economic, and political realities of the time that he depicts in his work. The novelist will occasionally give time flashbacks. The plot shifts from the present to the past and back again. However, too many flashbacks may cause confusion.

3. Weather conditions - Is it rainy, sunny, stormy, etc?
4. Social conditions - What is the daily life of the character's like? Does the story contain local color (writing that focuses on the speech, dress, mannerisms, customs, etc. of a particular place)?
5. Mood or atmosphere - What feeling is created at the beginning of the story? Is it bright and cheerful or dark and frightening?
CHARACTERIZATION.
Characterization is one of many crucial aspects of literature. A character is a person who takes part in the plot. Characters include the protagonist and antagonist. The protagonist is the primary character of a novel, the one on whom the author spends the most time investigating or developing, and whose conflict drives the storyline along. The protagonist may also serve as the story's first-person narrator. The antagonist is the character who opposes the protagonist or hero and generates conflict in the story.
The author may reveal a character in several ways:
his/her physical appearance
what he/she says, thinks, feels and dreams
what he/she does or does not do
what others say about him/her and how others react to him/her
Characters are convincing if they are: consistent, motivated, and life-like (resemble real people)
Characters are people in a novel or a story who are given moral or dispositional qualities by the author and display them via their actions. Characterization is defined by how these people act, react, learn from their experiences, and change. When a character moves us and stays with us, we say that the characterization is powerful. A character develops slowly during the novel, and as we read on, we get to know him or her. We even become one with them, emotionally participating in the ups and downs of their fortunes.
Type of Characters are...
Individual - round, many sided and complex personalities.
Developing - dynamic, many sided personalities that change, for better or worse, by the end of the story.
Static - Stereotype, have one or two characteristics that never change and are emphasized e.g. brilliant detective, drunk, scrooge, cruel stepmother, etc.