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Teresa
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Jun 22, 2014 11:15AM

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Then the characters invariably come in and take over and tell me the story. It may or may not have anything to do with my original premise. They tend to be insistent. I try to keep up.
I also edit as I go, periodically going all the way back to the beginning. It helps me keep in touch with the story and maintain consistency.



I had read other survival stories like The Swiss Family Robinson and The Mysterious Island, but the best was Tunnel in the Sky. That seemed the most likely scenerio, so finally giving in to the urge to tell a similar story, I wrote Surviving the Fog. I did not plan to write a sequel, but after receiving complaints from female readers, I wrote the same story Kathy's Recollections from a girl's POV.

I do not outline the plot. New books begin with either a concept (which implies a specific opening scene) or an opening scene (which implies a concept). BUT, I cannot get on with writing until I have the same thing for the ending: a scene and a concept. I may not know who the real bad guys are, or what's really going on, but I have to at least have some idea of beginning and end.
The middle part is the journey of discovery that marries the two. It's a journey full of surprises, struggles and revelations.
On several occasions, though, I've reached a certain point where I just knew I'd never be able to go forward without sitting down and describing what's really going on, who the bad guy(s) is(are) and what the back story behind the scenes is.
I've actually written documents called "Whats Really Going On" to spell that out.
After that's sorted, I can then charge on to the finish, knowing that I have a map of the terrain even if all the roads and stops along the way are not spelled out explicitly.


I envy you. I would love to figure out how to do a screen play/

Some writing projects will require more research than others. Sometimes you'll be writing about something you know enough about not to need to do much in the way of research. Sometimes, especially in fantasy, you're making everything up so don't need to do any research. Other times, especially with historical fiction, you need to do a lot of research. I'm sure you get my point. Although, if you count reading in the genre you choose to write in, then I guess all writing projects technically require research. Mind you, I think researching as much as possible to put in extra details helps the story as a rule, as the extra details bring it to life for the reader.

Beginning writers, you can learn a lot from Micah's methods.

My current two books have loose outlines that change as the story develops. The advantage is that when I get stuck at the end of a scene and I'm not sure what to do next, the outline comes to my rescue and gets me going again.
However, I don't allow the outline to be a straightjacket. If my muse dictates another path, the outline has to change to accommodate that.
I think I prefer the outline method, especially when experimenting with new writing methods. In these cases, the first book is going to be told in first person from the view of the sidekick. The second in the series, while written in third person, has a female heroin; something I've shied away from for a couple of decades because being in her head isn't natural. Forty plus years of marriage gave me enough insight into the female mind (I hope) to brave the challenge. So far, it seems to be going well, but it's on the back burner until I finish the prequel.

That's research :-)
I find myself doing tons of research no matter what kind of story I'm working with. Gotta have the details right!


That made perfect sense to me. Should I be worried?
Mine start as daydreams of an event, a scene that usually ends up at or near the end of what will eventually become a story. It's as if I know the destination, but must work out the correct route to that place.
As for characters, they just seem to show up according to the needs of the story. Something must happen for the story to be told. I need someone to do X, who or what would fill such a role? The characters evolve to fit the need.

It's not a sequential process, so I sometimes struggle to come up with all the little "in-between" bits bridging these ideas together. I don't usually outline, and it's pretty nice that way; you never know how the story or characters will evolve or react since even you as the author don't always know what's up next.
Most of my first drafts would be comparable to others' second or third revisions since I can't really separate my editing side with my creative side. It takes a lot longer since I end up going over everything several times, but it works out in the end.
Books mentioned in this topic
Surviving the Fog (other topics)Kathy's Recollections (other topics)
Lord of the Flies (other topics)
The Swiss Family Robinson (other topics)
The Mysterious Island (other topics)
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