Showing posts with label Book Arc. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book Arc. Show all posts

25 March

You Stopped Writing 'Cause It Got Too Hard - NOT an Option

 

If you’re reading my STOP Not Writing blog, 9 out of 10 of you are serious about your writing craft. For it to be a primary or secondary career, not a casual hobby you pen now and then.

So, for those 9, I present you with an awakening.

You can’t stop writing when it gets difficult. It’s when it gets difficult you MUST write.

Yep. I know that feeling…

You’ve come to the point in your manuscript where you’re stuck or you’ve run out of ideas or the character isn’t acting, saying genuine things, or you think your story sucks, etc., etc., etc.

STOP thinking on the negative, is your first task. Go make a drink, sit back, breathe, and chill. You’re getting yourself all worked up for nothing. Remember: writing is NOT a race. It is an art form which needs time and patience. The rest of the world may be going 0 to 60 is a split second. Artists must throw the middle finger up at that populist swill and take the time that is needed to craft a great work of art.

Artists do NOT march to the world’s beat, peeps. Artists CREATE the beat.

Get a backbone and remember that.

If the non-artists in your world gripe about your process, smile, nod, and walk away. They’ll have been born, live, and die, never knowing the artist’s way.

Now, START thinking on the positives. The ways in which you can get this manuscript back on the right track and your fingers pounding the keys.

Hint: When faced with a literary wall, real or imagined, return to your plotline. And yes, this applies to Pantsers, too. Every writer requires a generalized plotline to ensure they don’t write themselves into corners or dive-bomb off cliffs. You Pantser freaks, don’t lecture me about being a free spirit. You can type with abandon, but you need to know the road you’re typing on. So, if that means you’ve not created a generalized plotline, DO IT NOW. I’ll wait. I need a second coffee, anyway.

Listen, you’re already writing paralyzed, so grab some cheap recipe cards and plot out your novel. One scene per card. Obviously not writing, you have nothing better to do.

For those who were smart and created your plotline before you began, it’s time to return to it. Read over each scene card, in linear order. Re-familiarize yourself with your own tale.

No, I don’t care if you are missing scenes. All writers will have scene black holes when they start a new book. (All except for Ian Flemming with his 007 Bond books he crafted in his mind as he sunbathed on a delicious beach in Jamaica. Don’t look at me now. I’m green with feral envy). This exercise is to get your mind’s eye to envision the story line as it is now, in its entirety, so you can re-envision the story arc — the beginning, middle, end, and denouement.

If you’re stuck writing, chances are your mind’s eye has lost the vision. You need to reinstall it into your brain. Think of this as a CPU reboot or some such techno exercise I probably abhor. You need to SEE where you are and where you’re going to BE there, right?

As you read the scene cards over, I’ll bet dollars to donuts you’ll have an ah-ha! moment where the missing piece clicks into place, where you see how you veered off track. If this doesn’t occur, get a friend to read your scene cards and your draft. They’ll surely see your gaffe for you. Buy them a cocktail as thanks, those evil-eyed beta friends.

And once you see where you went off track, you can return to that page, delete the erred section(s), and type on. I’ll also bet now your fingers won’t be able to keep up with your mind’s eye, knowing what is supposed to happen next, and to whom!

So, when you fear the keyboard, when you’d rather have bamboo shoots shoved under your fingernails than write, the above is surely happening to you. Follow the steps I’ve outlined, and you’ll surely be back on your way.

If writing is your life’s métier, stopping is NOT an option. There’s always a way. It’s in the artist’s backbone — their grit, determination, and focus through the worst of times — that will, like sand working inside a seashell, create a lustrous pearl.

Life Fact: Nothing great comes easy. It never will. Accept it and write on.

18 May

A Book's Log Line... Do You Know Your Story?

 

Do you know what a Log Line is?
When to use it?
And that it's YOUR KEY to overcoming your perceived writer's block.
Bet you didn't know that!
Well, it is. 
 
If your book's log line rolls naturally off your tongue, you inherently know your book's story arc. Your tale isn't just a tale anymore; it's seeped into your writer DNA.
 
What is a Log Line?
It's a one-sentence summary declaration of your book.
Simple.
Not so... 
 
Many new writers get stumped on this beaut, and for good reason. If you do NOT know the impetus and arc of your story, you will not succeed at boiling that story down to one sentence which encapsulates the hook, the inciting incident and the main character's raison d'être.
 
When to use a Log Line?
In an in-person pitch to a publisher or acquisition editor, to anyone wanting to know what your book is about. The time it takes you to state your story summary in an elevator ride to any influencer or interested party.
 
When I find one of my process group writers stumbling over creating this sentence, it's proof to me that they simply do not know their story well enough to competently write it. I refer them back to their outline, or have them create one — chances are they haven't — even if they tell me their draft is done. I know by their log line confusion/frustration, there will be big plot development and character motivation gaffes in that draft without me even looking.
 
HOMEWORK: If you're struggling to write on your WIP - Work In Progress - stop, and attempt to write a log line for your book. One sentence that encapsulates all. If you try and can't succeed, return to your outline or make an outline. You don't yet know your story's purpose in life.
 
Fact: Your brain can't competently, fully, write to the finish, what it doesn't know. Get to know your story. Start with its Log Line.
 
Below, in the Comments Section, state your book's working title, genre, and log line to me here. 
Let's see if you've got your story in the bag!