I’ve blogged before about starting a new novel and the terror of facing (and filling) the blank page. Today I want to share the carrot at the end of the stick – the excitement of connecting the dots, tying up any loose ends, and polishing a manuscript to a glossy finish.
When I
commit to writing another book and begin the drafting process, I give myself
permission to take all the crazy new ideas and suggestions, throw them into the
hopper, and see what sticks. At this point it’s crucial that I don’t prejudge
or try to edit them yet because some of these ideas seem to be subconscious
‘placeholders’ – a necessary plot point that my subconscious doesn’t know
enough about or even want to deal with at this point in the process, but
something that I will return to in a future editing cycle when I have more
information about the overall story. There is some fun here.
For
instance, in my current work, I knew there were four people in a car. In my
first draft, ‘four people in a car’ was as detailed as I got as I maniacally scribbled
on. Today, as I tied up loose ends, I returned to that gappy placeholder. The
fun kicked in as I paused to consider the possible options now that I knew the
whole story. At this point I now know who the four people were, where they were
sitting in the car, and why. I certainly didn’t know this level of plot detail
when I drafted the initial placeholding scene, but evidently my creative
subconscious kept bubbling away on it until those missing details popped up
today when I finally needed to fill them in.
It's a
great feeling when I connect the dots. It’s a kind of magic.
I also
think this concern for detail might hamstring newbie authors if they feel they
need to answer all the outstanding questions immediately. It takes some
practice to learn to trust the process, accept the skipped bit, and simply write on. If I do start
obsessively worrying about these manuscript gaps I remind myself that the same
brain that painted me into this corner is the same brain that will get me out
of it.
The
second magical phase starts with editing. I usually go through two editing
cycles. I wish I had a cut-and-dried answer on how to do this but how I go
about it is different with each book. One of my favorite author friends said
that writing is the toughest job you’ll ever love because the better you get at
doing it the more you realize how little you really know. What I do know is
that if I commit to putting in the necessary time the words (and eventually the
better word choices and images) will flow.
The
best electric editing excitement happens when two previously disconnected plot
points click. This is when I find myself hunched over my keyboard quietly muttering:
‘Ooh, that’s good.”
I
learned one final editing trick from reading Raymond Chandler’s The Big
Sleep (1939). Now with my final polish, I go back to my first chapter or my
first 10 pages and insert hints and threats pertaining to each character’s
individual deep dark secret(s). Planting any clues this early precludes any
spoilers because the story is still so new the reader doesn’t have enough data
yet to engage their understanding or their imagination. These clue seeds get
planted but they go right over the reader’s head.
Here's
how Raymond Chandler did it:
It was
about eleven o'clock in the morning, mid October, with the sun not shining and
a look of hard wet rain in the clearness of the foothills. I was wearing my powder-blue suit, with
dark blue shirt, tie and display handkerchief, black brogues, black wool socks
with dark blue clocks on them. I was neat, clean, shaved and sober, and I
didn't care who knew it. I was everything the well-dressed private detective
ought to be. I was calling on four million dollars.
The
main hallway of the Sternwood place was two stories high. Over the entrance
doors, which would have let in a troop of Indian elephants, there was a broad
stained-glass panel showing a knight in dark armor rescuing a lady who was tied to a tree and didn't have any clothes on
but some very long and convenient hair. The knight had pushed the vizor of his
helmet back to be sociable, and he was fiddling with the knots on the ropes that tied the lady
to the tree and not
getting anywhere. I stood there and thought that if I lived in the house,
I would sooner or later have to climb up there and help him. He didn't seem to be really
trying.
What
are your final polishing habits or tricks? Inquiring minds want to know.
I love to hear about other people's writing process.
ReplyDeleteI'm not nearly so organized. Some stories write themselves, and all I have to do is record what the characters are saying. Those stories usually just need a read-through and line editing.
Other times the concepts swirl around in my mind and never quite congeal until the fifth (or fiftieth, if I haven't consigned that story to the "hopeless" file yet) round.
I love the idea of gong back to the first few pages and deliberately inserting relevant details.
Some stories do write themselves - and I love when that happens. I also have a slush/hopeless folder of stories some of which are decades old that are still waiting their turn for that final polish. I've learned to let them simmer until they're ready to be released.
DeleteDefinitely going to add Chandler's suggestions to my arsenal.
ReplyDeleteKait I'm glad you like the tip from the master. Now that you know about it, you may start seeing it everywhere.
DeleteI love the Chandler idea.
ReplyDeleteAs I'm going to be blogging about here on Sunday, my process is different with every book. One thing that's constant, though, is once the first draft is complete, I go back through it and jot reminders in a notebook about clues and foreshadowing to remind myself to make sure they make sense later in the draft... and to fix it if they don't.
Hi Annette - I call checking those reminders "sifting." I double and triple check dates, and clues, and locations. There's always something I miss but luckily I have a cruel team of beta readers who love catching me out and correcting me. LOL.
DeleteLike the stained window! I sift through a complete draft and write down all the unanswered questions.
ReplyDeleteHi Margaret - I dedicate a notebook to my unanswered questions. It's the only way to keep things straight!
DeleteI learn so much from your posts, Martha! Thank you!
ReplyDeleteHi Lori- I’m glad to hear this! It’s one reason I attend so many conferences and panels. I never know what I’ll learn.
DeleteMartha,
ReplyDeleteLike you, I've learned to trust the process. When I find myself adding an element that I've questions about, I know that this will be dealt with later on in the manuscript. The unconscience at work!
It's one of the hardest leaps of faith to make - I'm working with a newbie author and I'm not sure she believes me yet, but we'll get there. LOL.
DeleteI agree about the subconscious. When I wrote One Taste Too Many, the first in the Sarah Blair series, the first half flew into being, but something was wrong with the second half of the book. I finally realized it wasn't working because I was trying to make a certain character be the killer...and it was the wrong character. I threw out that half of the book and everything seemed to fall into place to quickly finish the rewrite. Then, I went back to make sure the book worked, with the changed murderer, and what I discovered was that I'd already planted the clues and red herrings without consciously realizing it.... the new character ending made the book actually fairer to readers.
ReplyDelete