I'm serious, actually
Jul. 29th, 2014 05:49 pmJust out of curiosity -- is there such a thing as a book plotting method that doesn't start with "brainstorm as many scenes as you can come up with, then juggle them till they're in the right order"? Everything I've been able to find in the last twenty years of writing seems to boil down to that, and that's not the way my brain works. I would love to do more planning so I don't waste so much time, but that's not the way for me to go, thanks.
After four novels, I really want my writing time to be more efficient, but this isn't helping...
After four novels, I really want my writing time to be more efficient, but this isn't helping...
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Date: 2014-07-30 04:27 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2014-07-30 04:40 pm (UTC)They taught us this at one of the Writer's Weekend workshops back when those were still happening. The idea being that you start with a single sentence, then expand that out a paragraph, and then expand each sentence in the paragraph out into its own paragraph. Eventually you wind up with a synopsis.
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Date: 2014-07-30 04:58 pm (UTC)Do you know of any readily accessible resources for this method? Do they discuss this part of the issue or do they just assume your blurb covers the entire plot?
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Date: 2014-07-30 05:04 pm (UTC)Taking it in a synopsis direction is the tricky part, since you do have to actually put some thought into what the ending should be, so you can actually write about it.
Re: online resources for it--here's a post my fellow author Tia Nevitt did about the technique, including an infographic:
http://tianevitt.com/2013/03/06/six-paragraph-synopsis-method-the-infographic/
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Date: 2014-07-30 05:45 pm (UTC)Maybe not today, though. Feeling a bit defeatist at the moment.
(as in, all I can think is, well, yes, synopsis -- that thing I've never been able to write until the book is finished)
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Date: 2014-07-30 05:47 pm (UTC)