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Plotting
• All Purpose Plot • Crafting Romantic Suspense • Links - Plotting • Writing by the Numbers •
Writing the
Novel by the Numbers (But it's not all that
easy)
By Jack
Bludis awa Jack Burns © 2002
Originally titled:
Mystery by the Numbers
In answer to the question about how novels get
written:
There are several ways to write a novel, one is to wing it, which
works if you've done a lot of reading and a lot of writing.
Another is to do bits and pieces and string them together, this
works too, but it can drive you crazy.
Most how-to books are aimed at the novice or even at the
storywriter who has not yet taken on the novel.
The basics are simple -- and this is how I usually do it:
-
Create the lead character and show him or her
in action in the opening sentence -- usually with some
dialogue. This gets the story started. (Some [writers]
may want to do a background biography of the lead character,
but I usually create characters whose bios come out in the
writing.)
-
Once you have a few characters and know where
the story is going, do an outline. (I usually do the outline
after I've done about fifty pages, maybe after three or four
pages of story..)
-
Break the outline into chapters or
sections. (It's a good idea to have key dramatic events
in the beginning, and at the 1/4, 1/2 and 3/4 marks of the
story.)
-
Write the book, following the outline as best
you can, but allow for interesting sidebars which may become
subplots or even major plot incidents that enhance the entire
work
-
When you've done your first draft, go through
it again, moving scenes for dramatic effect. In
the case of the mystery, make sure you plant all the clues and
red herrings you need. In other genre, make sure the
required genre incidents are properly spaced. Romance
novels usually don't have a love scene on every page.
Nor is the historical novel a simple recitation of fact.
-
Rewrite the novel with the [scene]
changes. This is not necessarily a complete rewrite if
you are using a computer or word processor. But, you
must go through it from the first the the last page to assure
consistency. [You don't want to hold Aunt Martha's
funeral in chapter three and find her alive and well, and
talking to the hero in chapter 9.]
-
When you're finished, polish, polish, polish.
Make it the best book you can make it -- but don't be
obsessive.
-
Proof read like it's a composition in English
101, for which you must get a perfect
grade.
-
Send it out.
-
If it gets rejected, send it out -- again and
again and again. Step #9 and #10 are the lesson it took me
years to learn.
This may not be the best way for everybody to
write a novel, but it is how I do it; and I am sure it will work
for others.
Jack Bludis aka Jack Burns
___________________
The Big Switch by Jack
Bludis, not by Jack Burns. It's the first time he's using his
true name on a piece. He wrote that he doesn't mind being known by
both names, but if you look for The Big Switch at your
local book store, check under the Bludis name. The Big Switch
be available in July at bookstores, at Amazon and B&N on the
net. (He'd prefer you to ask your local book stores about it
before you buy it on the net.)
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