If they can do it...

A wise writer once said to me
"There's no such thing as writer's block.
Only writer's embarrassment."

Words to live and write by.

Name:

The truth is out there... some of it is even in my blogs.

Wednesday, October 19, 2005

In which I have too many cups of coffee

Well, I have a little time right now 'cause I drank too much coffee trying to stave off the headache I was getting. (Temperature plunges, migraine skyrockets... sigh.) So I've been playing around on the NaNo boards trying to be sociable. All the folks posting in the "Young Adult/Youth" forum are, well, young. Ah well. I am what I am.

There has been some discussion on the merits and perils of outlines, both at NaNo and at TC, this past month. I used to be very anti-outline. I used to firmly believe that once I knew how the story ended, I lost interest in it. But as I have said elsewhere, not having an outline really truly doesn't work for me. I just fall off the plotting cliff. I don't know that having an outline WILL work for me, but at least it's worth the try. It can't work any worse.

I've been finding, as I expand the story from the one page summary to the longer summary (see the snowflake model stuff I rave about in earlier posts), that I work out some of the cooler aspects of the story. Things start to fall into place and make sense. Things start connecting to one another in ways I didn't expect. I'm not finding the outline particularly restrictive. See, I'm looking at it as a road map, not as a set of driving instructions. It's giving me the lay of the land. I don't need to follow it slavishly--it just represents the best driving path at any given moment. I have no problem going off-road, because I can see the territory. I find this to be a cool thing. As I expand my outline, it's like adding in all the little side streets. And there's nothing to prevent me from heading down other sidestreets if that's where the story heads. I know how to get where I want to go from wherever I am. My outline is more like an organic thing than a static thing.

I read about the objections to outlines, and I mostly think "Mine really isn't like that." It's more like doing what I usually do in my head, but down on paper. See, when I write a short story, I'm pretty much on the 5th or 6th draft before I ever start typing. I've got the bulk of the plotting, characterization, and dialogue completed before I ever sit down to a typewriter. I've even worked out some of the descriptions. I can do that in my head with short stories, because they are short. I haven't been able to do it with anything longer, though, no matter how hard I try.

The "outline" I'm doing is simply doing for scenes what I do for short stories. And since it's all written down, I don't have to try to keep it in my head. I can tear it apart and work on it scene by scene without losing the big picture. Everything is in place when I sit down to write and (hopefully) I can just go and Write the Damned Thing.

Mind you, I haven't tried actually writing the story yet. I could change my mind about all this after November 1st rolls around ;).

Wednesday, October 12, 2005

In which things move along

Well, I haven't been keeping up here, but the planning is continuing apace. I've worked out a few more minor loose end type things. I still have one big gaping hole, but I expect it'll get filled in eventually. My writing friend just had a baby, so we haven't been able to meet for a while. But I've been doing stuff anyway, which is good. I do need to work out some of the characterization stuff, or I'll end up with stereotypes. Anyway, mostly just wanted to let folks know I was still working on stuff.