First of all, I must apologise for the lack of updates recently, blame a 20th birthday, a tonne of assignments, preparing for a house move, and a new project, which is what I want to talk about in this blog.
Recently I started a new project, and by project, I mean a new story. I'd finished my old one (finally, after changing my self imposed finish date four times) and had had this idea in my head for a long time, so I had been excited to start it. The only problem was that I didn't know where to start.
One of the worst parts of being a writer is finding a place to start. So often a project sounds perfect inside the mind, but when it gets put on paper, it falls to pieces, or holes start appearing, or sometimes the story logistics get changed round. What's more, you have to get a feel for the characters again, find the voices of these people, possibly world build around them, and basically start from scratch. And that is difficult. We get so caught up in our projects that when we have to let go of them to start a new one, it's hard to let go. I've been a victim of this time and time again.
Even when I have been writing a sequel, I find it quite hard to get into the new story, even when it is the same characters I've been writing for a long time. Keeping them consistent is hard, as is keeping their voice flowing, and I think it's because it's the daunting idea of the new story that causes it.
But new characters in new stories are the toughest offenders. Characters, plot, setting and everything has to be reintroduced. Old stories have to be forgotten about, everything is fresh. You can't get into the plot and sink your teeth in because you have to establish things, and get a feel for what you're writing. And it's tough, so, so tough. To be perfectly honest, it's one of the things I hate the most about writing, because it's so hard to get things flowing in a new story. Of course I know I can rewrite later on, but I like to get everything going ASAP, and when I can't get the details right, I can't move forward. I get stuck, feeling desperate to just get on with it, but unable to until the details are right, especially when they're essential to further the plot later on.
I need to learn to control this perfectionism, but at the moment, it feels impossible.
It's murder on the brain, and can be a great one way ticket to the horrible land of Writers Block, something every writer wants to avoid. All I can do in this situation is push through, do my best, and tweak as needed later on. Book openings have to be written, characters need introductions, setting needs to be placed, and plot needs to be at least hinted at before anything else can happen. It's the hardest thing, but it's worth it. The time used writing introductions etc helps to introduce me as a writer to the characters, and everything else, to give me a feel for how this book (or draft at least) is going to turn out. From the introducing paragraphs, I can ascertain just how dark it's going to be written in, what POV I'm writing from, as well as tense and everything else.
I like to view these hard first few paragraphs the testers, to where I can prepare myself for what I'm getting myself into, and know what kind of thing I'm subconsciously going for with the story. I can set out my tone and get a feel for my new story, so I know where I need to go from here. It also helps me figure out if I need to go back to the drawing board and plan out a few more things. I've found it's so much harder to write myself out of a plot hole when writing the middle section of a book, than it is to write myself out when I'm at the beginning.
Basically, this long, winding post that probably doesn't make sense (it's late, straight after a bank holiday weekend, and I'm writing this after I melted my brain on assignments, don't blame me) is trying to say that really, beginnings are a struggle, but a good thing. Beginnings are needed to introduce you the writer to the story, and gives you the chance to go back to the drawing board if needs be. It's so hard to write, and sometimes you just want to jump the gun and get on with it, but it's worth it. In fact, it's a necessity. So don't skip your beginnings, don't leave them until the end of the book to write. Go and write them now, if they suck, you can tweak them later, but for now, get the testing ground going. You'll thank me later.
A blog of reviews, writing advice, and suggestions on how the TV shows should have done it.
Showing posts with label editing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label editing. Show all posts
Tuesday, 29 March 2016
Thursday, 21 January 2016
Top 5 Most Important Editing Points
Hey, so here’s the start of my series of blogs/vlogs on editing
your novels! I thought I’d start off with a check list of the most important
things you need to check for in your work. It’s so important that you get these
things right, as these are the basics of a novel that you have to get right in
order to get anywhere else.
11)
Check for spelling and grammar mistakes. That’s
an obvious one really, because spelling and grammar are very important things.
Spelling should be relatively easy thanks to spell check, but grammar is a bit
harder to deal with, but there’s a few things you can do to help yourself out.
One is to read your work allowed to yourself, speaking and reading engages
different parts of the brain, so you pick up more mistakes if you’re reading
aloud. It sounds nuts, I know, but it actually works. I’ve done it before, and
have had it recommended by several tutors so I know it works a treat. And two, you can use a website called
Hemingway, which checks through your work and clearly highlights sentences that
need improving. I’ve used it loads and it works great.
22)
Check your story for coherency. Make sure that
your story makes sense and that it is easy to understand. I’m not saying you
can’t have a convoluted plot, if you want that, go for it, but you have to make
it easy to understand, or you will lose your readers. Make sure that you’ve
explained your plot fully in your story as you’ve gone along, and not suddenly
including an important element with no explanation as to how it got there.
33)
Make sure you have tied up all loose ends.
Unless you’re writing a series and are planning on tying up loose ends in a
further book, all the fragments of the story have to come together to make
sense by the end. Go through and make a list of all your plot points, and check
off each thing you resolve and see if you have anything left over by the end.
If you do, you’re probably going to have to go back and resolve that point
somewhere. Obviously, if you’re planning a series out, you can resolve plot
points in a further book, but make sure that by the end of the series you have
actually done that. As for one off books, then you have to resolve all plot points
or you’re going to anger a lot of readers, as they will want answers.
44)
Make sure you’re consistent. If you’ve started
writing in first person, make sure you’ve stayed in first person throughout,
unless you have a specific reason to change it. Check to make sure your
characters physical attributes are consistent and haven’t suddenly changed for
no reason, make sure you’ve kept to the same tense throughout (a
flashback/memory is mostly where a change from present to past tense is
allowed, everything else should be in the same tense). All of these things are
really important, and you have to make sure you have kept everything like that
the exact same way throughout the novel, unless there’s reason for things to
change. If there’s no need for things to suddenly jump from present to past
tense, then make sure you’ve stayed in the original tense.
55)
Keep your story line on the right track. You have
to be certain that you’ve kept to your story line from the beginning until the
end. A story is going to go nowhere if your character starts off trying to find
their parents at the beginning, and ends up battling demons by the end, unless
they have been drawn into doing that while on their original quest. If they’ve
completed their original quest and have had to go on another straight away, fair
enough, but you have to make sure that that original quest has come to
completion by the end.
It’s all about consistency people;
every single thing has to be consistent and kept on a similar path. And yes,
editing is boring, I know. But it’s
an incredibly important part of the writing process, and will be the thing that
sharpens your story into the incredible epic it can be. The editing is so, so
important, and you have to check for these things and change anything that is
wrong, or your novel won’t go anywhere.
If you guys have anything else
you check for when you’re editing your stories, please comment below, I’ll add
anything to this main post, or start a new one, so we can create one massive
checklist of editing!
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