Hi again. I’m fashionably late as usual.
Well,
if sweat shorts and a tank top counts, but you don’t see that.
I won’t
fib and tell you that I’m all dolled up.
It’s writer dress code:
Shabby-Sit-for-four-hour-periods-at-a-stretch.
And this post touches
on fashion at the end. Stay with me and we’ll leave off on that note.
I’ve been busy since
returning from Romance Writers of America nationals and submitting my manuscript for
publication. I look forward to having good news to share soon.
And I have a
pretty new RWA pin on its way to me now, too. Whoo-Hoo!
It will be the pride of my nametag lanyard when it arrives.
In its
wake emails have been sent, queries issued and I’m embarking on manuscript
number two; a new journey.
With
all this experience I often wonder if I’m getting comfortable with the process.
There’s always this spark when typing the first words, the first sentence. A
buzz that says a new adventure is beginning.
Whenever I mention that
I write books, I smile when someone comes back with, “You’re an author? That’s cool!”
I feel that I must earn
the title, even though I’ve done the work.
When reading the author Q&A on blogs, I notice that a writer inevitably gets asked, “When did you know that you wanted to write?”
When reading the author Q&A on blogs, I notice that a writer inevitably gets asked, “When did you know that you wanted to write?”
For many the response
is, “Since I could hold a pencil” or “Since before I could walk.”
I wish I could say that
it started that young.
In the weeks leading up to Nationals, I thought back to the origin of when I knew writing was the dream.
In the weeks leading up to Nationals, I thought back to the origin of when I knew writing was the dream.
I think the process is
what developed initially. I remember watching television shows and pointing out
the gaps in the plots. I liked the drama when it was plausible, real. I’d break
down the series of events in my head and connect them, like dots. When an image
formed with the lines, an overall connected theme, I got this feeling of
victory. Like I linked it all together, that the story had come full circle. Which
kind of points to my writing style.
In writing there are
two types of drafting personalities: Plotters and Pantsers
Plotters are those who
like to have an outline before starting to write. The events and story arc are
bullet-point and sequential, with few surprises. Pantsing is coined from the
phrase “Seat of your pants.” It’s where the writer sits down and lets the story
come to them, which is spontaneous and in the moment.
Pantser. If on deadline, add hair-pulling. |
There are pros and cons
to both of these approaches, but as with all acts of creative endeavor, there is
no wrong way, you go with your process.
I’m a plotter by nature,
listing the scenes, drafting them in linear order, which isn’t as dry as it
sounds. There are times a moment surprises me, unfurling some unique emotion, or
opening up a sweet nuance that connects to the overall story.
The parts of my books come to me in pieces at first, floating around my head, keeping me up at night. The pivotal scenes tend to emerge early, fermenting in my mind’s eye until I get it down on paper.
That is one of the stories behind THE FIRE WALKERS. I didn’t expect to draft FIRE first, I didn’t think I had it in me to do it. Then the heroine’s big black moment burst into my head and changed everything...
Before packing up to
head to Atlanta, I made a trip to the library. I drive when I travel, and I take
audio books along to fill the hours on the road. This year I borrowed the
biography of a famous media magnate. Engulfed in his story, I listened to the
whole book during my drive; with one part standing out. It mentioned how he used
story-boards in all of his features, a process that has been rarely used in movie-making since.
An expensive middle
segment, the planning out of the script in scenes enabled animators to edit or develop
the elements of the narrative. Thus resulting in some of the most memorable images
in story-telling. I found that fascinating.
It reminded me of an outline of a book. Plotters use big index cards that list the actions, point of
view and “essence” of a scene. Many writers tack them up on a cork board to synchronize
the order, changing and intensifying as the story gels.
Like a story-board. Without a pen touching
paper, it's writing.
And I’ve done this from
the beginning. From the time I was little, I'd connect the dots. I think that
counts.
So, where’s that
fashion I promised you? I didn’t forget.
I had a friend in high
school who dressed a little strange.
Always trendy and
out-of-the-box creative with it, she earned the funny looks not with her style,
but with her timing. At the end of summer she wore heavy layers. In the dead of
winter she donned bright, cotton colors. She remained perpetually three months
ahead all throughout school, putting on a show called, “What is she going to
have on today?”
To many this came
across as odd. It went against the silent and impermeable creed of secondary
education:
Thou shalt not wear shorts year round, nor dress in contrast to the elements.
Over the course of four
years, she cast off the nay-sayers with her polish and flash, and went on to graduate
with honors.
How does this relate to
dots and writers, you ask?
A few years after our class
reunion I got an update. After college, my friend headed up to New York City with a
degree in design, working her way up from an intern position at a big fashion magazine.
An industry that continually
works a season ahead.
Those were her dots.
Her story drove home a personal belief: I think everyone has a concealed talent.
It reminds me of a favorite
quote by Drew Barrymore:
“The
only fundamental rule for me is to just be yourself,” she says. “Let your
freak-flag fly.”
That stands for mice, men, fashionistas, and writers.
-
SNG
;0)
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