- You’re beginning to wonder the point of your story.
- You’re getting overwhelmed by too many islands, ideas, chapters, research, or information and want to begin to organize them.
- You’re curious about how you might start your book.
- You’re beginning to see a clear way to begin or end but are flummoxed about the middle.
- You are working from an outline but it seems too restrictive, and you want to include more ideas but aren’t sure how they fit.
- You are realizing you have more than one story-and wonder if you can include it in your book.
- You have letters, journal entries, or important backstory (history) to use but are confused as to where it might fit.
Structuring
begins to happen anytime-you can move into the structuring phase when
you only have ten pages written, using it as a brainstorming tool for
planning which islands to write next.
You can also wait until you have a substantial amount of islands (scenes, fragments, ideas) written out.
Either option works well.
I
usually use the structuring phase when I first begin a book. I write a
little then I play with possible structures. From my structure
exploration (storyboarding) I get many ideas on what to write. Then I go
back to the gathering phase to do the writing.
This
may seem backwards to you. In many writing classes, especially in high
school and college, we’re taught to use an outline, which assumes we
know our structure before we begin to write-fairly ludicrous to expect
this, yes? Except for some nonfiction projects which are well researched
early on, or a book idea you’ve been simmering in your mind for many
months or years, it’s impossible to guess a good flow without
experimenting on paper.
So,
an outline is a often “best guess.” You end up redoing it as you learn
more about your book, which is fine. The danger with an outline is that
our linear brain gets ahold of it and decides the imposed order of the
outlined topics is set in stone. It becomes very hard to change.
It’s
far easier to use a storyboard to play with ideas and a possible
structure for your book. Storyboards are used by many, many publishers.
As
a book doctor and editor, I was often hired to take a manuscript and
analyze its structure. One project recently was for a writer in New York
City whose latest novel had been rejected by a dozen major publishers. I
came in for the structure analysis.
I
storyboarded the book and voila, the problem emerged. Two of the four
characters had narrative arcs (inner stories) which stopped mid-book.
Storyboarding is fun, easy, and fluid. You can learn more about it here on my video, if you wish, and see what it’s like.
I find it opens the creative faucet inside and I get LOTS of new ideas for my story. See if it works for you.
No comments:
Post a Comment