My Novel is a Mess
(How to survive the chaos point in your novel)
By Melodie Campbell
(Bad Girl)
(Most of the words are the same. But here I am, a year later, working on book number thirteen. And just like eleven was at this time last year, my book is a mess. Which just goes to show that the blog post written below is dead on the mark.)
Yes, I’m at that point.
Writing to a specific word count, three-quarters written, and my
eleventh novel is an unqualified mess.
If you are a veteran writer like me, you say it’s not going
to happen this time. But it does. EVERY
FREAKING TIME.
Here’s why:
The Linear Approach:
This time, you are going to write linear, by gawd. One chapter after another, in mathematical
order, until you reach the end. Each
chapter will have an outline.
But here’s the problem with that. You signed a contract that specifies a pretty
exact word count. Is your story going to
magically end at the precise word count you need?
Damn straight, it’s not.
It’s going to meander along, minding its own business, taking little
side trips, refusing to stay on course.
Because, of course, outlines are just that. They’re a guide. You don’t know whether the story is really
going to pull together with sufficient motivation and all the goodies until you
actually write the thing. And here’s
what happens mid-writing:
You need a new character to make the plot work. You just thought of a fab new subplot. Orlando doesn’t work as a side-setting. You need to move it to Phoenix, and that
means a whole lot of changes…
And before you know it, you’re scribbling on the outline,
adding this, subtracting that, and then it happens. Your book is a mess.
Scene plus Scene
I write comedy, and comedy is finicky. Those good lines come when they come, and you
have to get them down fast. Sometimes
they’ll present themselves to me when I’m in a restaurant. Sometimes, when I’m already in bed. (Yes, I keep a pen and paper on my bedside
table. Ditto, by the loo.)
I always have an outline.
But when writing a highly comedic book, you have to write those funny
scenes when you are inspired. This means
hopping around the timeline, writing the scene that works for you today,
thinking of another great line, hopping back to an old scene to insert it, when
you should be moving forward.
Which brings you to this point: the important scenes are
written, and they present themselves like completed sections of a jigsaw
puzzle. You need to put them
together. Find the pieces that are
missing and write the bits to connect them.
Because Sister, your novel is a mess.
That’s the point I’m at now.
The comedy is there. The
conflicts are in place. The climax is
written. Now I need to take that
kaleidoscope and move those pieces into the pattern that works best.
How to cope? I think
the best thing you can do is accept that this is going to happen. Unless you are a robotic automaton lacking
inspiration, you are going to veer from the plan more than once.
At some point, every novel you write is going to be a
mess.
My advice: just accept it.
And understand that part of your role as writer is that of clean-up
artist.
That’s where I stand today, staring at a story that looks like a tornado just ran through it.
Time for the cleanup crew.
LOL - I'm right beside ya, Sista!
ReplyDeleteSheri, you always know the right thing to say :)
DeleteThis post is helpful, Melodie. Either it's helped me to realise that the way I'm writing isn't working currently, or to realise that my current writing isn't a way of working. I'll get back to you, when I've figured it out. ;)
ReplyDeleteGiven the choice, I'd go for the latter, Tara. I'm all for the fresh take on things. (Damn, you're witty)
ReplyDelete