Showing posts with label new writer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label new writer. Show all posts
Friday, March 8, 2013
How To - Writing, Step TWO
A few weeks have passed and the little notebook, kept inseparably attached to your writing pen, is rapidly filling with notations, sketches, thoughts and images. Random though these may appear, you now have the opportunity to create an organized story out of the scrolled chaos scribbled over the pages of that precious little book.
The assembly of your cacography into a coordinated thread of ideas is the next step...aka: creating an Outline.
(This is actually my least favorite step!)
Typically, once an author has a fair number of pages filled with ideas, he also has a relatively good idea about what his story will become. At this point, the great temptation is to begin the act of writing the actual story, bypassing the important step of outlining the plot - including character devlopment. I am one of these authors who have been unmercifully enticed into skipping the outline in lieu of writing the story. However, this is never a good idea....particulary for me!
I learned a valuable lesson from a very famous, very successful author - someone I admire tremendously. J.K. Rowling understood the importance of the outline. For FIVE YEARS, Ms. Rowling outlined the Harry Potter series, beginning with that infamous train ride sketching ideas on napkins as she travelled through Scotland the day Harry Potter was created. Not only did J.K. Rowling outline the plots, she also outlined the details of each intricate allotment in her stories, ie: the type of feather used in each wand, the smells and tastes of the food consumed in the dining hall, the rulebook for Quiddich, the color of the woodwork in Snape's office, etc. My admiration for the dedication of this talented writer allowed me to take a step back, breathe deep and begin the process of outlining my own series.
Initially, outlining your story will feel an arduous task. Fortunately, the notebook you have compiled will assist you and as your outline progresses, the skeletal portion of your story will take shape. Start by identifying the conflict and subsequen resolution. What ultimate antagonism will your hero/heroine face and how will they overcome it (assuming they do)? The events that occur prior to this climax and those that follow are the rest of the outline.
Creating the basic blueprint for your novel is worth your time and dedicated effort to complete. My advice is to follow the example of those who have proven successful - such as J.K. Rowling. There will be much more to add to this outline in time but without it, detail will be lost and the spine of your story will be soft.
So here's to the strength of a well-written story! Here's to the OUTLINE!
Sunday, February 24, 2013
How To - Writing, the First Step
"So Marti, what is the very first step to writing a novel?"
If I had a dollar for every time I've been asked this question....but what an honor to be asked! The same question escaped my lips not many years ago as a fledgling-author attending the first writer's seminar of my life. My guess is that every writer has been similarly perplexed at some point during their career. Fortunately, we are all part of a thriving team of creative thinkers seeking the same "correct" process.
So what is the first step?
Anyone asking that question will receive as many varied answers as there are stories waiting to be written. Let me give you my take on the subject.
To begin, open your mind and lose any expectations. I say this because stories have a magical way of weaving their own tale when the author is willing to step aside and allow the plot to evolve. Ideas are genuine and valuable even when they make no sense at all. Eventually, the fabric of creative thought weaves itself into a beautiful quilted story. Because of that phenomenon, it is critical for every author to be prepared to capture ideas, thoughts and images as they reveal themselves. The method for being the "tool", whose job it is to capture these revelations, varies with each author.
As a "tool", I chose to write with a pen on actual paper held within the confines of a plastic cover...aka: a notebook. Indeed, I keep a notebook with me at all times and have been known many-a-time to pull over while driving to jot down dialogue that suddenly sounds or an image that appears, all within the confines of my very active mind.
The notebook - my lifeline within the pool of imagination I swim in daily. There is freedom that comes with having the ability to allow creativity at any time, in any place. This freedom comes with having some way to facilitate the ideas that present themselves. Of course, if the "tool" is not predisposed to writing long hand, anything else that allows some form of note keeping works. It is simply a means to record the ideas as they come to mind allowing the author to draw on these documented ideas at a more convenient time.
To say that my notebook is invaluable to my writing is the grossest understatement. So many revelations are inscribed there. I am thankful daily for the chance to preserve creative thought as it is gifted to me.
And so this is my offering - the first step - a keeper of ideas documented within a journal.
Happy writing and may creativity be gifted daily ~
Marti
Monday, February 11, 2013
The Necessity to Write
Only recently have I realized the correlation between the breath and my need to write. Both are events which occur without much thought until the desperate moment when my soul become starved from lack of it. Indeed, as the industrious Captain Phillips experienced when cast overboard, the survival instinct surfaces as oxygen is depleated. Writing becomes oxygen and a fight-or-flight instinct to sit in silence and create is no less the survival process for an author.
Many have contacted me asking what to do when that urge to create bubbles. Unaware of the "tools" needed to write, these talented authors struggle to "breathe" life into their story. How to do it is the question..."how do I survive with this story screaming to surface?"
The thought crossed my mind that perhaps my brief experience as a published author, screenwriter and now producer might be of benefit to some. The resulting shift in my intention for this blog site steers a different course for the words to be written on this site. That intention will be to write for authors, historians, film creators and those who hunger for the means to release their story. My hope is that I can offer something of substance to you. This is done in humility and with the sincerest desire to share experience only, never assuming that you (my very learned collegues) are lacking. In fact, the opposite is the case....I desire to learn from you as well and hope this blog will become a forum for authors, writers, visionaries, creators and imaginations everywhere. Indeed, that is the title of the blog and the intent from the beginning.
Please return and partake of my experience, learn from my mistakes and successes and let's move forward as creators and imaginaries together. Until the next post....
Namaste ~
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