Are You a Plotser or Pantser? Err...Or However that Goes
You’ve heard the heated arguments.
“I have to plot every detail, or I’d have a mess to edit.”
“I let the story lead me. Plotting stifles creativity.”
Plotter or Pantser--each proponent is passionate for his or
her method. Are you a plotter, or do
you fly by the seat of your pants when you write? I have done both--very
effectively I believe. And each method has its benefits as well as pitfalls,
but I have to say I’m about 90% plotter at this point. But I still let ‘er fly
about 10% of the time. Just write!
But, see, I don’t think plotting interrupts creativity
unless you are anal retentive. If you CANNOT let go of your outline and follow
a character’s lead on occasion or realize there is a plot point you need to
include, then this post isn’t for you. For the rest of us, we see the value in
having a structure made of malleable material.
Here’s mine. Following Holly Lisle’s “discovery” approach (www.hollylisle.com), I do some serious upfront prep. In Discovery you write down your theme, subtheme, one-line story arc for your main character, create a 25-word book summary, write the back-of-the-book blurb, and descriptions of your main characters. Whew! That is a lot of fine-grained thinking before you write a word.
I print out this stuff and post it around my desk for easy reference. Just re-reading my book summary at the beginning of the writing day, for example, helps me keep focus.
The next thing I do is list 10 key events from my plot. What is the most important stuff happening or revealed? I post that, too. Here’s what that looked like for my first (still unpublished) paranormal, Quick and the Dedd, with main characters Isabella Quick, owner of I.Q. Security Systems, and Riley Dedd, her best operative who was electrocuted a few months before the book opens.
10 Key Scenes:
Riley’s ghost, a key-but dead-operative,
appears to his boss, a disbelieving Isabella
Isabella checks out Riley’s ghost
claim
Another firm wants to buy her
security firm out
Physical and financial threats
cause her to consider selling her company
Isabella sees hope to rescue her
company with a project bid for airport security
Her company gets picked for the
contract despite some dirty dealings
Riley figures out his murderer and
the competing company are the same
Isabella confronts the operative
who is sabotaging the airport project
Justice is brought to bear for
most of the culprits
Isabella and Riley try to make
love and he disappears--forever?
Scene
|
Where
|
Who
|
When
|
Point of scene
|
What happens
|
1
|
Offices of I.Q. Security
|
Isabella
Riley
|
Anniversary of 6th mon. after Riley’s murder
and also Riley’s 42nd birthday
|
Intro MCs;
Riley tries to
convince her he is real-but a ghost;
Intro plot point of finding his murderer
|
Drunken Isabella discovers the ghost of Riley sitting on
her desk. She puts it down to alcohol but he insists he’s real.
|
2
|
Trini’s apt. for dinner
|
Isabella
BF Trini
Gus Stan
|
Evening after
Riley’s appearance
|
Intro support characters; Isabella doesn’t believe Riley
is a ghost; wants Stan to run a check without him knowing what it’s about; she’s
afraid her bias will change results
|
Stan questions why he should check but agrees to go to
Radio Shack for the stuff Isabella identified from an on-line article on
ghost hunting; include stuff on their backgrounds and relationships; bring up
big contract they’re going for--her rationale for Stan’s check; confirms
|
I print out these scenes and tape to file cards I stack on my desk. Time to write? Pick up the next scene card and begin. Of course things happen as I write, so I add to scenes, create additional scenes or characters, and move scenes. The normal stuff. But the big stuff is there.
This may be just me, but first-draft writing comes pretty easily--if I’m prepared. When writing is hard for me I know I’ve not researched enough, plotted enough, or know my characters well enough. My current system ensures that doesn’t happen anymore.
How about you? What is your system for completing your novel?
Bio:
After 39
years as an educator, Sharon Arthur Moore "transitioned" to the life
of full-time fiction writer. She's an intrepid cook, game-player, and
miniatures lover.
She
writes culinary mysteries, women's fiction, historical fiction, short stories,
plays, paranormals (under the pen name River Glynn), and erotic romance (under
the pen name Angelica French).
Sharon
has lived in every region of the country except the Pacific Northwest and loved
every single one of them. Her current favorite region is the desert Southwest.
She is married to the most extraordinary man and claims four children, one
daughter-in-law, a grandson, and yellow lab Maudie.
Contact Sharon through her Facebook page: Sharon Arthur Moore Fan Page or on Twitter @Good2Tweat.
Follow her blog, “Parsley, Sage, and Rosemary Time”, at: http://sharonarthurmoore.blogspot.com
Thank you for visiting with me, Sharon. I absolutley love the cover of Mission Impastable!
Comments
We truly are kindred spirits! Reading this post with a detailed explanation of your writing process made me smile. I was beginning to think I was the only writer in the world who went to such lengths before actually starting to write.
I enjoyed your post. Like you, I print out my outline and keep it close to my computer as I write. Of course, I deviate from it occasionally. I like your idea of listing ten key scenes.
JL Greger
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