pmmg
Myth Weaver
Imagine the system one must have for rejection if they are getting manuscripts at that rate.
This pretty much describes my ‘process’ too. Very back and forth and I spend probably just as much time thinking about my story as I do creating it.So for my current wip, here's a VERY tiny breakout of the process:
1. Scene popped into my head. A good one.
2. Thought alot. Came up with a few more scenes.
3. Wrote a zero outline which started a bunch of big questions.
4. Thought a lot, answered questions which generated more questions.
5. Characters started popping up out of the fog. Started fleshing them out.
6. Revisited my outline. Moved stuff around.
7. Wrote out pages of bios and descriptions, fiddling with my outline.
8. Started referencing the 3 act structure, checking my scenes, coming up with new scenes that i liked that made better sense plotwise.
9. Had the HUGE hangup that I didn't like the journey aspect of the story. Could have made it work but really didn't want to.
10. Thought. Alot.
11. Had an inkling, wrote a few pages, liked where it was going, rewrote the outline, double checked the three act, close enough for a first draft.
There are still some elements of the last half of the book I don't care for, but It's time to smash through a draft and hope either inspiration strikes or it sounds better when I write it out than it does on the short list.
There are aspects of the story that I consider concrete, because I love them and without them it would be a different story. Other than that it's all fluid.
Yeah, I'm still developing it, but for me more on the front end is way healthier mentally.This pretty much describes my ‘process’ too. Very back and forth and I spend probably just as much time thinking about my story as I do creating it.
Does this mean you are on the side of, its useful to have and to study?
You know, having spent the day thinking about this, for once in my life I'm going to disagree vehemently with you and with Penpilot .This ^
Penpilot is correct. It's Writer 101. We should know about story structure. We should know about the submission process. We should know how our industry functions. We should know about everything we can about being authors because even if we don't consciously use any of it, it informs our writing and makes us better writers.
So where does that leave my argument on story structure? Well, you don't need to know about it to write a good story, but you do need to think about your story. Who is it about, how did they get there, why are they reacting like this, where are they going, when and why?
Whoops! Sorry, I completely spaced on this part. We use story structure a like, and fully intentionally. We like the traditional 3 Act, with action rising and hitting mini-climaxes (good heavens, I really am 3 12-year-olds in a trench coat) and giving the reader, and the characters, a wee break before we're off again. It came as a lifesaver with Beneath a Stone Sky. Keeping track of 3 storylines that eventually merge was a hell of a circus actI know about story structure. I'm not sure it has helped me in my writing. For a time knowing the stuff was actually negative, as it made me anxious about things -- how do I tell Act 1 from Act 2? Is the shift in this chapter or that one? Yes rising tension, but how much? And how do I measure it? Does Story Beat X fall at Y% of the story?
And so on. I gave all that up and am a better human being for it.
I'll take this space (seemingly unoccupied at present) to complain that no one has been able to tell me exactly *how* they have used Story Structure in their actual writing, anywhere from planning right through final edit. In fact, most who have responded so far have done so in order to count themselves among the Not Using faction. I am genuinely curious, as everything I've read has been too nebulous to be practical.
Why Swede! What will the neighbors say?You know, having spent the day thinking about this, for once in my life I'm going to disagree vehemently with you and with Penpilot .Or at least vehemently disagree with the idea of story structure. It isn't about using or modifying a given structure for a story. It's about our ability to communicate. I've spent a large part of my life giving orders to do things and writing reports about what (I think) has happened. I've also written academic papers and seen them published. I've got four books out there, three novels and a collection of short stories. They all have something in common, and I'm not thinking about the author.
The thing they have in common is that I'm trying to convey something: the why, the where, the how, the what, the when and the who. That needs thought.
In the military we insist on a structure, because we need that when we're under severe stress (like in the middle of a firefight). We need to know where to look in the orders to quickly find out what we're to do next. BUT, even then I don't need all the bits. For a multinational force, yes, I need all the order sections. But when leading my own Swedish troops, no - because we have a number of things in common which means I don't need to say some things. A set of orders for a multinational force might run to 45 pages, the same orders for my Swedish brigade I could write on less than 2 pages. It's all about thinking what I need to say.
In academia you need a certain structure to show what you've done and how you came to those conclusions. But, depending on what I'm writing about I may be able to refer to or cite certain other papers so reducing or even eliminating the need to say something. Really original research needs far more explanation and discussion, not because it's controversial (although it might be) but because it is original. You need to think it through when you're trying to explain it.
So where does that leave my argument on story structure? Well, you don't need to know about it to write a good story, but you do need to think about your story. Who is it about, how did they get there, why are they reacting like this, where are they going, when and why? Answering those questions isn't about story structure, it's about characterisation. Then you can start writing. The story, when it ends, should in my view have answered those questions. But that doesn't mean you have to answer the questions in any given order, or even in the same order for all characters or in all your stories. Think it through, every time. Then write.
I know about story structure. I'm not sure it has helped me in my writing. For a time knowing the stuff was actually negative, as it made me anxious about things -- how do I tell Act 1 from Act 2? Is the shift in this chapter or that one? Yes rising tension, but how much? And how do I measure it? Does Story Beat X fall at Y% of the story?
And so on. I gave all that up and am a better human being for it.
I'll take this space (seemingly unoccupied at present) to complain that no one has been able to tell me exactly *how* they have used Story Structure in their actual writing, anywhere from planning right through final edit. In fact, most who have responded so far have done so in order to count themselves among the Not Using faction. I am genuinely curious, as everything I've read has been too nebulous to be practical.
So where does that leave my argument on story structure? Well, you don't need to know about it to write a good story, but you do need to think about your story. Who is it about, how did they get there, why are they reacting like this, where are they going, when and why? Answering those questions isn't about story structure, it's about characterisation. Then you can start writing. The story, when it ends, should in my view have answered those questions. But that doesn't mean you have to answer the questions in any given order, or even in the same order for all characters or in all your stories. Think it through, every time. Then write.
I should b***** well hope so. After all, that was what I was trained to do: disturb the peace when necessary, in order to never have to disturb the peace.98 replies Swede - you are officially a disturber of the peace.
It's your earlier comment about using structures unconciously which I want to come back to. This is, I think, at the heart of why I don't think we need to know story structures. We carry them within ourselves, we just need to let them run as we write.Maybe I should elaborate on my not running comment. I posses health and the basic ability to run, but I’m not naturally pre-disposed to it. If we relate this to writing, we can perhaps also say that there is a complex mixture of factors there to make someone be both good at writing naturally and also have things in place (like a basic structure, unconscious or conscious) for it to be an overall successful endeavour. That’s why I will stick to yoga and lifting weights.