Hello,
I've never gathered the gumption to sit down and write something yet. I seem to have a fear of the process, or something ineffable I can't quite fathom. As a psychic salve of sorts, I thought I'd outline how I think a novel gets written and pass it by all of you writer types. Perhaps my fear involves getting to step 675 and realizing "Awk! Between steps 345 and 360 I should have done [insert missed opportunity resulting in weeks and weeks of rework]!!" So this is my attempt to calm myself down.
Here's how I see the process of writing a novel from not having gone through it.
Phase I: Chaos
- Think of scenes, characters, settings, beginnings, endings, etc., etc., in stream of consciousness; write everything down
- Determine basic narrative structure, or at least a general "first drafty" sense of it
- Write a sprawling 1st draft with no expectations that it will meet any standards whatsoever (i.e., an edit draft)
Phase II: Organize
- Pick through first draft, remove redundancies, extraneous scenes, rationalize plot lines, characterizations
- Realize that something else might be emerging, explore new direction(s)
- Go through notes again, think a lot about the monster you've created, bat away constant self-doubt
- Create more organized, rationalized second draft as an output of Phase II; this one may actually be readable. Maybe create additional drafts depending on amount of revision
Phase III: Start to Polish and Expose
- Read latest draft all of the way through for feeling, bonehead mistakes, and entertainment value (i.e., overall worth)
- Decide whether continuing this thing is really worth it
- After polishing up another draft, find an honest reader to peruse it (assuming it's in the right state for this)
- Tinker some more based on feedback, additional thoughts, and feelings about the overall work; create another, even more polished, draft
Phase IV: Almost there
- Rewrite latest, more polished draft for all literary content
- Have additional honest readers scan this latest draft; start asking for very brutal, honest feedback such as "if you had paid $14.95 for this, would you curse the author's name?"
Phase V: Final draft
- If self-doubt and brutal feedback have not destroyed the project or your spirit by now, create final polished draft based on brutal feedback. Put draft away for about a week. Take it out and read it following the week. Revise based on elements that you now know stink.
-Have more people proof read (unless you've run out of patient friends by this point)
- Complete final draft.
I'll skip the agent/publishing part since that assumes the process has produced something publishable.
Am I warm? Ice cold? Solar prominence? Zero Kelvin? Is this sort of what I'd be in for if I actually decide to sit down and write?
Thanks!
I've never gathered the gumption to sit down and write something yet. I seem to have a fear of the process, or something ineffable I can't quite fathom. As a psychic salve of sorts, I thought I'd outline how I think a novel gets written and pass it by all of you writer types. Perhaps my fear involves getting to step 675 and realizing "Awk! Between steps 345 and 360 I should have done [insert missed opportunity resulting in weeks and weeks of rework]!!" So this is my attempt to calm myself down.
Here's how I see the process of writing a novel from not having gone through it.
Phase I: Chaos
- Think of scenes, characters, settings, beginnings, endings, etc., etc., in stream of consciousness; write everything down
- Determine basic narrative structure, or at least a general "first drafty" sense of it
- Write a sprawling 1st draft with no expectations that it will meet any standards whatsoever (i.e., an edit draft)
Phase II: Organize
- Pick through first draft, remove redundancies, extraneous scenes, rationalize plot lines, characterizations
- Realize that something else might be emerging, explore new direction(s)
- Go through notes again, think a lot about the monster you've created, bat away constant self-doubt
- Create more organized, rationalized second draft as an output of Phase II; this one may actually be readable. Maybe create additional drafts depending on amount of revision
Phase III: Start to Polish and Expose
- Read latest draft all of the way through for feeling, bonehead mistakes, and entertainment value (i.e., overall worth)
- Decide whether continuing this thing is really worth it
- After polishing up another draft, find an honest reader to peruse it (assuming it's in the right state for this)
- Tinker some more based on feedback, additional thoughts, and feelings about the overall work; create another, even more polished, draft
Phase IV: Almost there
- Rewrite latest, more polished draft for all literary content
- Have additional honest readers scan this latest draft; start asking for very brutal, honest feedback such as "if you had paid $14.95 for this, would you curse the author's name?"
Phase V: Final draft
- If self-doubt and brutal feedback have not destroyed the project or your spirit by now, create final polished draft based on brutal feedback. Put draft away for about a week. Take it out and read it following the week. Revise based on elements that you now know stink.
-Have more people proof read (unless you've run out of patient friends by this point)
- Complete final draft.
I'll skip the agent/publishing part since that assumes the process has produced something publishable.
Am I warm? Ice cold? Solar prominence? Zero Kelvin? Is this sort of what I'd be in for if I actually decide to sit down and write?
Thanks!