Basic Writing : From Pre-Writing to
Editing
Pre-Writing
Concept/Idea (Brainstorm about chosen idea. Write everything that comes to mind.)
Conflict/Problem (Without a
problem there is no story. Be sure the problem is solvable.)
Possible Conflicts: man vs man, man
vs nature, man vs self, man vs society, man vs circumstances
Characters (No more
than 7 main; the story becomes unmanageable and readers lose track.
Devise: Names,
Personalities, Relationships, Appearances, What makes them special.)
Plot (Devise 3
attempts to solve the problem. Then figure out why they won't work?)
Solution/Climax (How does the main character solve the problem? Is it reasonable as you’ve written
her/him?)
Conclusion (Wrap up
loose ends with all of the characters.)
Also Pre-Writing
Opening-be sure your beginning snatches the reader’s attention (pull action from within the story then go back and begin at the beginning to catch the reader up)
1st Plot Point-main character discovers there is a
problem
2nd Plot Point-main character feels threatened but
unsure what to do
3rd Plot Point-problem is at its worst and seems
hopeless THEN main character figures out what to do
Climax-problem or antagonist pulls out all
the stops to ‘get’ main character
Denouement-main character about to give-in then finds courage and
knowledge to solve the problem
Resolution-main character ends the problem for
good then wraps up loose ends with other characters
Writing
There are
two main types of writers, although many of us fall into combo categories: Planners and Pantsers.
Planners don’t write until they have a basic outline of how
the story will unravel. Some even outline each chapter. Planning doesn’t mean
you can’t change something, or add more while writing a chapter. It simply
helps you remember everything you wanted to include in the story. (This is how I write.)
Pantsers (writing by the seat of
your pants) begin writing and don’t stop until the story is told. This
technique is very popular but requires extreme editing and revising. It also
allows for free flow of imagination and creativity. (This is how Odessa came out and why it needed (and still needs) so much revising/editing.)
New paragraph for each new thought or idea
or speaker.
Use
quotation marks around the “words” spoken by the character. Instead of dialogue tags (he said, she remarked) use action. (His gaze flicked away from her face. Her voice dropped so low he could barely hear her.)
Each speaker
requires a new paragraph.
Watch verb tenses: if you start in the past keep all of
your verbs past tense; if you write in the present tense make sure they are all
present tense verbs.
Right-He ran down the road then stopped
at the intersection.
Wrong-He ran down the road then stops
at the intersection.
Present
tense is seldom used. I find present tense confusing and disarming. You are telling a story that occurred in the past, so use
past tense verbs.
Watch out
for point of view (POV).
POV
confuses a lot of beginning writers. It means knowing what a character is
thinking or planning. Knowing their viewpoint.
Many MG stories are generally told in third person while many YA books these days are in first person. HOWEVER, there is no rule about this. Write the story in whoever's point of view you wish--just keep it balanced.
If writing in the
first person (I, me, my , we, our) you CANNOT know what others are thinking or
planning. It takes a lot of dialogue to
understand others’ thoughts or desires.
·
The
only way to know what everyone is thinking is to use third person omniscient.
·
But
be careful because even that gets tricky.
·
If
you switch POV, be sure to designate it with a space or asterisks *****.
·
Never
change POV inside the same paragraph (called mind hopping, it becomes very confusing).
Beware of ‘Purple Prose’. This is highly
descriptive writing that may sound awesome but sometimes does nothing to promote the
story. You should have some description so the reader can visualize what the character is sensing, just don’t go overboard.
Every word, action or dialogue should propel the story
forward. If you have chapters or even paragraphs for character development
alone, remove them. Chapters with too much description of surroundings or too
much backstory/history get boring and readers will skip ahead anyway so edit down to only what is necessary to tell the
story.
Don’t tell too much of the story up front. Let out the
line slowly, keep most of the story as a mystery with clues until the climax
when you can reveal more. Too much too soon and the reader loses interest in
the story.
Revising
Don’t be
afraid to revise, revise, revise.
Get feedback from others and make changes to your story that YOU think will
improve it. NO ONE writes the perfect story the first time.
My first book, Odessa, was revised about 8 times and even after publication I'm itching to revise it again because by five books later my writing has improved so much I'm no longer happy with Odessa.
Let your
story sit on a shelf for several
weeks or a month. Work on another project. Then reread the story and errors,
misspellings, weak characters, weak plot lines, etc will jump out at you.
Editing
Once you
have the story to a level you are happy with it is time to edit.
Remove as
many adverbs as possible and replace
them with stronger verbs. To locate adverbs easily, highlight them using the
‘replace’ box in the ‘editing’ box of MS Word. Highlight –ly and most adverbs
will appear. Read through and eliminate as many as you can.
Highlight the following words in the entire manuscript then go through removing or replacing them with more powerful words/phrases:
AND
THAT
SAID (or ANY speech tags-replace with action)
any word you see repeated often
Remove as
many adjectives as you can. Do not
use duplicate adjectives such as “very beautiful”. If something is beautiful
that is enough. Very becomes redundant. Better yet, describe HOW it is beautiful
without using the word. Beauty is subjective.
WEAK: The river was beautiful that morning.
BETTER: Sun rays leaking through the early morning mist, lent the river a mystic quality.
Use Spell Check and look-up words that are
misspelled.
Pay
attention to punctuation. If you’re
not sure about its usage this website will help
http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/566/01 .
Probably MOST IMPORTANTLY--learn from your editor. My first book, Odessa, looked like a dying warrior after a lengthy battle with dragons--it was covered with red gashes. My latest book, ending edits now and soon to be released (Harpies Book Two of Seraphym Wars Series) looked as though it had taken a short walk through nice woods--a couple of little scratches! Even my editor was surprised and happy with my writing progress. So the bottom line is this--make notes of your mistakes then PRE-EDIT after your final revision. You'll save your editor a lot of time and frustration and yourself money and embarrassment.
Here's a little blurb about Harpies. Watch my website for its release: Under the Hat of MG/YA Dark Fantasy Author Rebecca Ryals Russell
Transported to a planet he'd never heard of was
the least of fifteen-year-old Griffen's problems. Learning to control his
suddenly increasing strength and new ability to pull lightning from the sky
takes some getting used to. Angry preteen Seth joins the quest; meanwhile
discovering his combusting ability as a fire-starter. Driven to find the last
Vigorio, a young girl able to experience others' emotions, they journey
together toward their destinies as warriors against Narciss, Ruler of Tartarus
and his Legio of demon-dragons. Narciss’s Harpy henchmen have other ideas,
however.
Thanks for the reminders. The manuscript I'm editing now has so many highlights of words I use too often that it looks like a rainbow. I'm guilty of too many: like, then, about. Making changes.
ReplyDeleteI find I'm closer on the spectrum to planner than pantser, which is an interesting thought! I also tend to stray into that popular purple area so that is a good point. (I must be feeling alliterative today!)
ReplyDeleteThanks for the pointers!