Some call it NaNovember. Some call it #$*&!^%. Or perhaps they use the
more popular NaNoWriMo.
No matter what label (epithet?)
you use, National Novel Writing Month is a time to remember. And dread. And
anticipate. And gleefully romp around in.
Re this blog, likely, as November
progresses, I will not have long posts, just short ones and updates on progress
once NaNo begins on November 1st.
I will dual post some days on
“Write Away” (my writing issues blog) since the posts will be about my new
culinary mystery and the writing
process. Hey, that way you only have to read one blog and get credit for two
this month!
I rarely struggled with
planning my culinary mysteries in the past, but this one was difficult for me.
I had trouble imagining, at first, my 10 key events (and ended up with 11 weak
ones), and other elements that I use when planning my mysteries. Why is that, I
asked myself as the deadline approached and I didn’t have a single scene card
done?
I was scared.
What if I was dried up with
no more stories to tell and only clever titles to toss out? What if I had a
great premise and concept but not enough stuffing to prop up the saggy, soggy
middle.
Where’s the tension? What
are the characters’ motivations? Omigosh, “stuffingf” like that was missing.
Big problem when you’re writing a mystery.
Enter a couple of
brainstorm sessions with fab crit partner Sandy Bremser, and voila. I broke through the fear. We
identified the major flaw (there are numerous big other ones we found, too) and
brainstormed fixes. After the first session, I generated 6 scene cards. I got
in another 10 after the second session. I am nearly at the halfway point (I
usually create ~40 scene cards).
Now I know how the novel
starts and how it ends, and I moved what I thought was a key scene in the
middle to earlier so I could have a scene there that has much more tension. I
created a bad guy, because, well, I didn’t have one before. Wow, Sandy! Thanks
so much.
So still behinder than I’ve ever
been at this point in my NaNovember PlotOber planning sessions, but I can do
this. I will have those scene cards
done before Wednesday morning. And, for the kind of writer I am, that is a huge
relief.
Bring it!
Best of luck, Sharon! I wish I could participate this year, but it's just not viable. I'll look forward to reading your posts! xxx
ReplyDeleteThanks for popping in, Martha! I hope it goes as well as I've planned. I'm dropping out of the A-Z challenge this year. The changes last year just didn't sit well with me. Too bad.
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