Subscribe by email!
Login
Search
|
The most useful technique I've learnt so far from Holly Lisle's How To Think Sideways and How To Revise Your Novel courses is the idea of the scene sentence. Essentially, it's one line that describes the key things which happen in a scene. I'm not talking details here, obviously - it's about focusing on the things that really matter. Since everything I write is done in scenes, this has been really helpful for me. It seems like a simple thing, but I've found that it really helps me to focus, at every stage of the novel writing process.
Holly has a great formula for actually writing the sentences, but essentially it's about these questions: what's happening in this scene that's really important? Who does it affect? And how does it move the story forward? You just write one sentence per scene. And the really key thing about it for me has been finding out whether 'scenes' really are scenes or whether they're actually just drivel. I'm recalling this off the top of my head, so apologies if I'm misquoting, but this line from the lessons sums it up perfectly: You have written a scene when something important changes. So if I write my scene sentence and find that there's nothing important going on there, it isn't a scene. This was crucial for the major edits on The Amulet of Sìochàin - there were quite a few 'scenes' that I didn't even try to rework - I just deleted them, because they didn't add anything to the story. The idea is to end up with one sentence per scene. But sometimes, lots of important things have to happen at once, and in the plotting stages when I'm trying to make sure I remember everything that has to take place, I sometimes end up with several sentences for each scene. (It's either that or one sentence plus lots of notes, and I prefer it all in one place.) When it comes to edits though, those scene synopses will be cut down to one simple sentence (I think Holly recommends 30 words) per scene. So today I've spent an hour or so writing out scene sentences for the rest of my WIP, which I started for NaNoWriMo. I'd done a bit before I started writing in November, and when I started to run out I'd plan the next few scenes ahead, but that started to get more difficult as I realised that I didn't really know what was going to happen next. So a few mindmaps and helpful lists later, I'd worked out most of the important things which still need to happen in this story. Then it was just a matter of fitting them together into scene-sized chunks and writing my sentences. I've put them in a logical order, but now that all of the important plot points are written down I can easily rearrange them if necessary, particularly with the storyboard feature in Storybox. As of tomorrow, then, it's back to the first draft. And now that I know where I'm going, I'm excited again. And I used to call myself a pantser...! Where do you fall on the plotting scale? Any tips for getting scene ideas down?
So... I guess it's been a while, huh? Apologies and all that. Must be time for a brief update...
Creativity Workshop Sadly, my last blog post was the last time I did anything directly related to the workshop. Other things took over, and although I would very much like to go back and work my way through the last few weeks of the workshop at some point I had to put it aside. That snarky mercenary is still in my head though, and I doubt she's going anywhere! I suspect she may end up with her own novel at some point, but she'll have to wait a while. The Amulet of Sìochàin I finished my story bible, eventually. It was useful, I think. I know the name of the town in the novel now, anyway. It may prove more useful in the future, if I ever get round to writing the sequel. Either way, I'm glad I did it, but it did seem to take forever. I'm now (finally) on line edits, and they seem to be taking even longer. But I've sped up in the last week or so - until this week I was having to limit myself to doing 15 minutes at a time, because it just seemed so tedious. This week though I've worked on it every day, taking advantage of extra pockets of time where I've had them, and I'm now on page 228 of 373. I can't tell you how long I've been working on it, but it's been weeks, and yet in the last week or so I've probably doubled my page count. This means that if I can get through nine pages a day for the rest of October I will be done in time to start NaNoWriMo. Talking of which... NaNoWriMo I told myself that if I hadn't finished my line edits by November, I wouldn't be allowed to do NaNo this year. I've participated in and completed it for the last three years, so that would be bad. To be honest, I'm not sure I'll really have the time to complete it this November anyway, but I want to give it a shot at least. Apart from anything else, I really need an excuse to write something else. I've been working on these revisions since January. Okay, they were extensive and required lots of new scenes, but apart from a couple of short stories I haven't written anything new since I finished last year's NaNoWriMo book. I have a one-sentence summary of the book I want to write. I'm really really hoping I finish these line edits in time to do just a little bit more plotting though. Goals So, goals. I'm never very good at these, but it seems a good time to make them all the same. Finish Amulet line edits by 31st October Participate in (and win) NaNoWriMo Complete NaNoWriMo novel (this will probably take me through to January) Type up Amulet line edits Do a final read through, put together a decent query letter and start sending it out Start on The Bonded edits (last year's NaNoWriMo book - love the concept, know it's going to need just as much editing as Amulet) and get it ready to submit to agent/book doctor at the Festival of Writing Attend Festival of Writing (end of March) And that's as far ahead as I can bear to look.
So, I said I was going to be working on those exercises on integral setting, right? Yeah. Well, I started to. I did the first exercise (I chose ancient Athens, incidentally) and found it really interesting - I think Merrilee's post really got some important points through for me. And then yesterday I started on the second, and it looked promising - I decided to do it for the novel I'm currently revising, since it's so fresh in my head. But I didn't get very far. I was going to continue with it this morning, but... well. Somehow I ended up in plotting mode for the second book in the series, and this is what I ended up with:
Essentially, I suppose they're mainly character sheets, with notes on the issues they're all facing and some of the most important things they'll have to do. I had been planning to do some collaging this week, but at the moment I don't have access to a particularly good printer so I haven't been able to do that yet (although I have found a few interesting pictures that I'll be using). But this may well have been the more productive option. I don't yet have my inciting incident, but I do have a good idea of my character goals and motivations (which is very rare for me at this stage) as well as some of the key events plotted out. I know where they're starting from, I know where they're going, and I know some of the places they need to visit along the way. It was probably the most exhilirating plotting session I've ever had - I was buzzing long before I sat down with my pencil and paper. I learnt some things about the bad guys I hadn't realised before, and I realised that one of the relationships I loved so much in the first book isn't going to survive this one. There were a couple of things I came across that I am going to have to feed back in as I go through and do my (hopefully) final revision on the first book, but that's all to the good - nothing major, more foreshadowing than anything, but important all the same. I'm excited about this book. I have no intention of starting to actually write it any time soon though - I'll get a more linear plan in place, and then I'll put it away. My current plan is to finish this revision and send it out, and then start working on the revisions for last year's NaNoWriMo book. It takes place in a completely different world, and it's one which I'm itching to get back to. That way, if things go really well, I have a plan for book two of the world of Amulet ready to go; if they don't, I have a whole other book and concept that I can bring up to scratch and start sending out. It does mean that I'm not going to be able to start work on a new book just yet, but I guess this is the year of extensive revisions, and that's okay. Last year I finished one first draft and then a week later jumped straight into the next, so it's only to be expected! If I can get Bonded revised by November, then maybe I'll get to work on another first draft for NaNoWriMo - but that's still some way off, and I don't want to rush anything. Creativity Workshop Week Seven: Coming Up This week, though, I need to get back into the workshop. Firstly, that means getting the second exercise on setting done and dusted - I have a feeling it will be useful to have that done before I jump back into the third draft. I think I'm going to put the third exercise aside for now and come back to it for the third block of the workshop, which is going to be about setting. The block which I'm now in, although a week late, is about relationships. I'm really hoping my plotting frenzy continues tomorrow so I can get some solid ideas, but we'll see! I originally planned to explore four kinds of relationship, but with only three weeks that's a little more difficult, so I'm cutting out the housemates story. This week, I want to try the mother and son relationship - it seems appropriate, since we're spending time with both my parents and my in-laws over the course of this week! I think this is going to be a challenge for me, since, for obvious reasons, I have never been a son, and have yet to be a mother. But it will no doubt be interesting. All I know about the story so far is that it's set in a small town. Tomorrow, hopefully, I will learn a bit more about it. |

