The title says it all.
If the answer is no, please give me the alternative.
You can, but if we're talking about light novels, the Japanese authors would be more familiar with Kishotenketsu, though the light novels you read may not follow it. The good light novels (not the slice of life ones) such as Kimi no Na wa, Decapitation: Kubikiri Cycle, Youjo Senki, Bakemonogatari and Zero no Tsukaima all used Kishotenketsu instead of a Three Act Structure.
Kishotenketsu can be split into 4 parts:
1. Ki, the introduction
2. Sho, the conflict or development
3. Ten, the twist or reversal
4. Ketsu, the result
You can google it. Ai-chan doesn't want to explain it, since everyone seems to have a different explanation about Kishotenketsu and may disagree with each other. But basically, here's how it goes, taking scenes from Tremors.
Ki
We get introduced to Burt's super awesome bunker that can withstand terrestrial graboid.
Sho
A new type of graboid, the assbursters crashed in through the skies and threaten to overpopulate when they came into Burt's supply storage full of high calorie MREs. So Burt blew up his super awesome bunker.
Ten
Burt was told that the assbursters were the last evolutionary path of the graboids and they have no self control. If left alone, they would eat themselves to death.
Ketsu
Burt throws his baseball cap to the ground and yells, "I didn't know! How was I supposed to know?!!!"