Tag Archives: Writing

27 index cards

Some months ago a protagonist and a premise presented themselves to me. I noodled around with them, on and off, and even wrote a handful of scenes. Then I stopped, because I had sworn a solemn vow not to write my way through a novel without plot, plan, or road map. I’ve done that before, and it hasn’t worked out well for me.

I had the beginning of my book, and the ending. I knew the two or three Biggest Things that happen in between. Almost all of the second and third acts, though, remained a mystery. I needed structure, causality, escalation.

“One of these days,” I told myself, “I will Grapple.” I resisted the siren call of scenes that seductively appealed to be written. Did they even belong in the book? “Must . . . finish  . . . plotting . . . .”

Yesterday afternoon  Bonnie shared with me the dining-room table in her family’s Portland house, several hours of her time, and, best of all, her insightful questions and excellent ideas. We did a Taos-style plot break on my book, complete with color-coded cards. And while we did not introduce a shadowy cabal of Norwegian secret agents, we did create a three-act structure that hangs together and will bear weight. Afterward, as she prepared for the red-eye flight home, I copied those index cards into Super Note Card, feeling grateful and excited.

NaNoWri Mo? NaNoWhyNot?

How to Write a Book

I’m crunched for time on a deadline right now, but it’s been a while since I posted, so I’ll take the lazy way out and post someone else’s clever stuff.

This piece on “How to Write a Book” was forwarded to me by my eagle-eyed and all-knowing pal Magda, from www.yankeepotroast.org, a site that bills itself as “The Journal of Literary Satire: Hastily Written and Slopilly [sic] Edited.”

  1. Do absolutely nothing until you can see the whites of your deadline’s eyes.
  2. If you’ve got cowriters, try to disagree as much as possible. If you’re of the same opinion regarding a section of text, bicker about dinner choices.
  3. Criticize what little progress you’ve achieved and doubt what little talent you possess.
  4. Do not write any new words when there are still old words that have only been rewritten twelve times. No sentence is complete until it’s lost all traces of your original thought.
  5. Complain about the pressure of a looming deadline to everyone you know. This will ameliorate the jealousy and bitterness felt by friends without book deals. It will also put an end to social invitations that may hamper your writing progress, as your former friends will now hate you.
  6. Stop sleeping. Complain about how tired you are too.
  7. Never have a mental breakdown before 11 p.m.
  8. Do not postpone other projects so that you can focus on the current one. It’s better to spread yourself so thin that you produce an evenly distributed amount of complete crap.
  9. If you’ve gotten this far without a single technical foul-up, now’s a good time to download something viral.
  10. Make a schedule for yourself, but do not even remotely follow it. Instead, continually do some mental math that divides your remaining pages by the rapidly dwindling number of hours.
  11. The best writing is that which is compiled from dozens of different documents, including things you’ve e-mailed or text-messaged to yourself. Try to create separate documents on as many different computers as are available. Some things will be irrevocably lost, and hours will be spent cursing. Learn a lesson about orderliness, but do not act upon such knowledge.
  12. Some terribly constructed sentences always make good low-hanging fruit for your cowriters to edit, thus protecting your awful idea from their meddling.
  13. Were you napping? Stop that. It’s 11 o’clock already. Start freaking out, hard.
  14. If you’ve worked hard three days in a row, take a hard-earned day off. And it looks like snow tomorrow, so you might as well take the whole weekend. But a day off from writing is not a day off from complaining!
  15. If you haven’t drastically gained or lost weight, you’re just not writing well.
  16. Assume your sources are reputable. When some accidental research reveals the source that serves as foundation for your work to be as reliable as grandma’s memory, briefly consider the amount of work it will take to correct things at this late hour, then fuck it and move on.
  17. Pick up any book on your bookshelf, skim a few pages, and admit that it’s a terrible book… but better than anything you’ll ever write. Cry.
  18. If one of your cowriters is something of an optimist, shit in his hat.
  19. If you’re not panicking, call your agent and request they he or she panics. You’ll have no problem panicking afterward.
  20. Call your mom.
  21. Your time is more valuable than your money. Spend as much cash as you’ve got in your pockets.

Yep. That’s about right.

A good day for ideas

Yesterday was, that is. (Today bids fair to be nothing but work, work, work to finish my book on Sea Mammals.)

Yesterday I had lunch with a friend whom I hadn’t seen for a while. She’s a writer (plays and short fiction) and was curious about my experiences at the Taos workshop. During our conversation, I mentioned an idea for a new book–or at least a premise that might be nurtured into an idea–that I’ve been mulling for the past few weeks.

Now, I’m not by any means going to abandon my large and messy time-travel trilogy, but I’ve been thinking about writing a shorter, simpler, stand-alone novel to put some of the plotting insights from Taos into immediate practice. And I’d outline this one first, rather than writing a flabby, unstructured, overlong novel and retrostructuring it. Anyway, I mentioned this germ of an idea to my friend. Just now she called me about an article she’s reading that is directly connected with the premise; it could offer some good plot possibilities. So I have a starting point: Get article. Read article. See what happens.

In an embarrassment of riches, I had another idea, or set of interconnected ideas, completely unexpectedly, while I was washing my hands in the evening. These ideas were for BS, the first time-travel novel. They concerned some fairly sweeping changes that would make that book a lot stranger, but better. They would also go a long way to solving a couple of its biggest problems. I immediately scribbled them down on my whiteboard, happy to have experienced my first out-of-the-blue breakthrough in a while. (Thanks, subconscious mind!)

And then we watched Children of Men. But even that couldn’t buzzkill my day.

Tools or Time-wasters?

So many things can be used for either good or evil (or idle).

Over the years I’ve collected odds and ends of software, things that purport to be–and in some cases are–useful tools for the writer. Here, in no particular order, are a few of them:

Evernote is one of the great free downloads of all time. I use this shareware a lot. It’s basically an endless scroll of notepaper. You can write to it, but I use it mostly for clipping items–with one click you can copy anything, text or image, from email, files, or the Internet (I had to download an extra software extension to use it with Mozilla Thunderbird and Firefox, but it’s simple). You can tag each entry with as many categories as you want; the program comes with a handful of preset categories, and you can create more of your own. Then you can sort the entries by category. One of my recent clips–a book review I read on salon.com–is tagged as belonging to my Atheism, To Read, Consciousness, and Science Fiction categories. That piece on The Well-Tempered Plot Device that I posted at Taos is tagged to Science Fiction, Writing, and Funny. And so on. The entries collapse into headings for quick scanning. Overall, Evernote is one of my favorite utilities. I use it to keep track of all the miscellaneous stuff I want to download/remember, without having to do anything more than select and click. Periodically I scroll through recent entries to update the categories or delete stale items, but it requires very little maintenance. You can check Evernote out at http://www.evernote.com

PageFour is another easy-to-use piece of shareware. It’s a set of simple notebooks that you can name whatever you want (you get three notebooks with the free version; if you buy the license–not very expensive–you can create as many as you want).  Within each notebook you create pages–for example, if you are using a notebook to work on a novel, you might have one page devoted to character notes, another to a chapter outline, and another to the text you are composing. PageFour is basically a stripped-down word-processing program that its designer says is put together to serve writers, not businesspeople. It imports and exports to/from Word, OpenOffice, and other WP programs. I have not yet written a long document in PF and may never do so; I like the OpenOffice word processor just fine. But PF makes a nice notebook for journaling, collecting thoughts, and organizing projects. The interface is simple and colorful; it reminds me of the new notebooks and pencil cases I used to love getting before each school year. Details and downloads are at http://www.softwareforwriting.com/pagefour.html

FreeMind is another piece of freeware. It’s mindmapping software for the visual thinker. I haven’t used any other mindmapping programs, but I found FreeMind super-easy to customize with color, shape, font, symbols, etc. It also accommodates long notes and other blocks of text that collapse and open again with a single click. FreeMind files are exportable as PDFs. I have a large whiteboard in my office, with many different colors of pens, that I have used to make notes for the three novels in my time-travel story. At one point the whiteboard was so filled with notes–ideas for names, notes of things to fix or add, and so on–that I couldn’t use it for anything new for a long time. It just sat there, colorful but static. After downloading FreeMind I took an hour to transfer all of the stuff from the whiteboard to a mindmap (and got a bunch of good new ideas while doing so). Now I have a single big mindmap for the series, with a section for each novel, each with its own color. Within each novel I can unfold many subsections with such titles as Quotes, Character names, Settings, Scenes, and Random Cool Ideas. Each subsection can hold as many separate notes or entries as I want to put there, all linked to their place in the overall scheme of things. I still use the whiteboard to jot stuff down in the heat of the moment, but now I transfer things to FreeMind when I have a minute, so I can back it up and erase the board. You can look at this software at http://freemind.sourceforge.net

Power Structure and Power Writer are full of bells and whistles; they also come with unusually whimsical Helps. (Note: These are not freeware.) I got the two as a bundled package, but they are usually sold separately; there is a great deal of overlap. PS is specifically a planning and outlining program; PW is similar but includes a word-processor that is compatible with Word, etc. These programs are designed to serve as story-development tools for novelists and screenwriters. I haven’t used them much, which will not come as a surprise to anyone who has read the first novel in my series. But I intend to use the Note-Card function in PS to do a Taos-style plot break of BS one of these days, when I have a chunk of time. You can get more info on these programs at http://www.write-brain.com

So that’s my little arsenal. Anyone else have any writing-related tools to recommend, or any experiences with these to share?

Dopavation

Yesterday I was talking with a friend about the perennially vexing fact that knowledge does not equal power–specifically, the yawning gulf between wanting/intending/knowing how to do something and actually getting started on it. I seem unable to motivate myself to get back onto a good, regular writing schedule (talking about my work writing here), even though I consider myself lucky to have all the writing work I can handle and a great relationship with a good publisher and blahblahblah.

She told me that she’d recently read an article about some new brain-chemistry research on motivation and the neurotransmitter (if that’s what it is) dopamine. D is part of the pleasure-related brain activity that also involves serotonin. My friend was fuzzy–and possibly not entirely accurate–on the details; I’d look it up but I’m insufficiently motivated right now. Anyway, the gist is that there’s growing evidence that dopamine is linked to motivation.  If you don’t have enough pleasure in your life, your brain becomes a restless, unfocused, distraction-seeking hamster, and you wind up frittering away time and energy browsing the Internet, watching The Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy during the middle of the afternoon, thinking that you should go to the gym but never going,  performing unnecessary housecleaning, and generally having no motivation or energy for the tasks that your brain knows are important but does not think are pleasurable.

The fix? Fun.

So far as my friend knew, this doesn’t amount to permission to give yourself over to absolute pleasure (which is exhausting in itself and can end badly, as we all learned from Dr. Furter). It means that if you build genuinely pleasurable moments into every day rather than telling yourself you can’t or shouldn’t go to a movie or read a new book in the bathtub or hang out with friends until you’re caught up with work, your dopamine levels will be stable and you’ll have more energy.

No doubt anyone who reads this is duh-ing about now. Yeah, this is Common Sense 101, but I don’t always live by it. Last year I passed through a particularly horrible stretch of work life–brought on by over-committing and procrastinating–during which I wrote 17 books in 7 months. No kidding. Of course, many of them were short, and for series with which I was familiar, but still, it was the hardest I’ve ever worked. The Season of Many Books, as we called it, was exhilarating to pull off, but it involved long days every day, no time to interact with Zach, almost no days off, and lots of  turned-down invitations and canceled social plans. During that time I got into an all-work-or-no-work mindset, but my goal is a sane schedule, one in which I work for 5 or 6 hours every day, not zero hours for seven days and then 14 anxiety-fueled hours for three.

So the dopamine-motivation hook got me thinking about my daily work life and some strategies to try. Of course, if I were really motivated, I’d be working on  the business plan for my new self-help book-seminar-infomercial-empire: Dopavate Yourself Now!