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Write in the Cracks
This is such a major issue that I
once wrote and sold an entire article about it. So many people say
"I don't have time to write" when what they really mean is
"I don't have a big chunk of time to devote to writing".
It was a stumbling block for me too, until I finally realized I didn't need
a big chunk of time. And neither do you. Each of us has many
"lost moments" in a day that we can put to better use
writing. You'll be surprised at the difference those moments can
make when you stop letting them fall through the cracks. Carry a
notebook and pen with you, and write whenever you find yourself with
nothing to do for a moment; whenever you find yourself waiting for
something else.
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Avoid "enemy words"
As someone who loves words, I had a
hard time considering certain words enemies. They really are,
though! Watch out for empty words in your writing. All
forms of "to be" are really empty--the worst is the word "was".
It took me years to come around to
the realization that adverbs are enemy words. So when you are
editing, check how your sentence would sound without the adverbs.
If the meaning isn't changed, cut them.
Do Character Sketches
I really can't emphasize enough the
difference this will make. Every writer has a different approach
for their character sketches, so experiment until you find the one that
works for you. I start with something almost like a rap sheet;
basic traits like height, age, hair color. After that I start
exploring personality, background--anything that comes to me. Even
if it doesn't seem relevant. Trust me on this one--even if the
things you write in your character sketch never make it into the
finished piece, you will know your characters infinitely better, and it
will show.
Most of the time, however, quite a
few things you discover in your character sketches will turn up in your
finished piece--sometimes so many that it will surprise you. Often
major plot elements will be decided or influenced by these.
Ultimately though, what it comes down to is this--you are asking your
readers to care about a group of imaginary strangers. If you don't
care enough to find out about these people, why should they?
I have posted a character
sketch template here for you to use. This is a general
template, newly posted, and I will be adding to it and perfecting it
as time goes on. It's a scaled-down version of what I usually do
for my characters.
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Write What Catches Your Fancy
Many times writers are told to
stick with their current project until it is finished, no matter
what. There is a certain amount of value to this advice, and for
some people it is golden. A significant number of us don't work
that way, though. An unfortunate truth for many is that when you
force yourself to write something it comes out sounding just like
that--forced. And for me personally, anything that I have to
force myself to write is going to be far from my best work.
So if this piece of conventional
wisdom doesn't work for you, toss it out. It is perfectly okay
to have multiple works in progress (just check out my works in
progress page!) Variety is the spice of life, after all, and
there is no reason you can't have variety in your writing life.
You will need a certain amount of organization to keep all your works
separate. Moreover, you will need to allot a certain amount of
time at the beginning of your writing session to read back over your
last few pages if you are returning to a work you haven't written on
recently.
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Keep a Continuation Plan
If there is only one piece of
advice on this page that you take with you, please let this be
it. The problem with words that are still in your head is that
they are like computer data that is still is RAM--until you save it to
hard copy somewhere, you are going to lose it as soon as the system
shuts down. A continuation plan will save you on two
fronts. First, you can use it to write down ideas for your
story--things that you want to have happen "later on".
You can be as general or as specific as you need to be, knowing that
when you reach an appropriate point in your work you can come back and
incorporate what you wrote--something that otherwise might have been
lost forever.
You can also use your continuation
plan at the end of each of your writing sessions. How many times
have you had to stop writing when you had a clear idea just how your
next few paragraphs should read--only to get up the next day (or
whenever you get time to write again) and find that those perfect
words are gone, and you have no idea what you intended? This can
be a double-bummer if you follow the widely-given writer's advice to
leave your work mid-sentence so that you can easily pick up next
time. Don't count on it! Especially if you haven't worked
on that piece in a while, you may find that even that half-completed
sentence is cryptic, and you are stuck. Use your continuation
plan at the end of each writing session to jot down your notes for
what you were going to write next. This will blend in well with
reading back over your work--each time you sit down to write you are
naturally going to scan over your continuation plan first. This
will get you back into the "mood" of the piece.
Read Your Dialogue Aloud
Honestly, this is a good
idea. How do you know if your words sound natural if you've
never heard them? Unless you are writing high-fantasy or some
other genre with strict language guidelines that aren't necessarily
common English, read it aloud. This will give you the best
impression of whether you are writing natural speech, or stilted,
contrived
artifice.
- Brainstorming
Sadly, this is becoming a lost
art. It's very useful, though, and I strongly advise you to give
it a try. It will help you come up with new aspects for your
piece, while making those you already have easier to see. How
can you lose?
There are many different techniques
for doing a brainstorming diagram. I prefer the classic cluster
approach; you should experiment until you find what works for you.
As an example, I've posted my
original brainstorming diagram for Concerto for Three.
This is the real thing, unedited, so it may be a little sloppy.
It is also a scanned image, so you may need to allow a moment for it
to download. Click
here to view the image.
Outlining
This is a tool often considered similar to
brainstorming, but it can help you in different ways. While a brainstorm diagram
is good for seeing hidden connections and elements of your story (thus helping
you generate new ideas and elements that suit the context), an outline is great for
showing you the overall view of your story. In a few pages, you can have your whole
novel laid out, start to finish, showing the major events in the order they will happen.
Of course, I said "major events", but you can make your outline as detailed as you want.
The only advice I would give you is that sometimes too much detail in your outline is simply
too much detail--I once wrote an outline that detailed every event of a book, even summarized
most of the dialogue, and by the time I got finished, I had no interest in actually writing
the book. The outline said it all. (It seemed like a good idea at the time!) So you'll need
to experiment, see what works for you. I've uploaded the first page of my original outline for
Concerto for Three here.
Keep a Timeline
This can be important, especially for longer works. If you are writing a piece
that spans more than a few days, it is an enormous help to yourself if you keep a timeline showing
what things happened on what day. You don't need to contrive dates for your story--simple "Day One",
"Day Two" headings are fine. Keep a list of major events that happened on each day, then if at some
point later on you need to reference how much time has passed since X occurred, it will be a simple
task.
I have to confess that I don't have one of these for Concerto for Three. My excuses; first, the novel
moves very quickly (as the excerpt implies) so it really doesn't span that many days. Second, the
mood of Concerto is such that the characters' (and reader's!) sense of time is blurred and
compacted, and keeping a timeline would have been detrimental to that effect. I do have a timeline
for The Music Mage; after that one gets farther along I may post that timeline here.
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