Tuesday, March 17, 2026

How Do You Approach Multiple Writing Projects?

 by Paula Gail Benson


Lately, I’m finding myself working on several writing projects, particularly two mystery stories (one I’m sure is a novel, the other is still revealing its length). I’m happy for the opportunity, but wonder how to manage the writing effectively and to completion.

The reason I have this dilemma is that I attended the Summerville Book Festival and spent some time with author friends. (See my post yesterday at The Stiletto Gang with more information about the Book Festival.) Previously, Dorothy McFalls and I had been in a writing group together where we discussed our work in progress. She remembered a story I had been writing at the time and asked what happened to it.

I had not thought about that story for years. When I got home, I looked up my notes and was surprised to find how close it was to being completed. I began putting the pieces together.

The story is part private investigation, part monster (based on a local legend), and part science fiction. The protagonist is the daughter of an admired history professor, now a patient in a mental hospital. The protagonist is tough, plain-spoken, yet compassionate. She struggles with a strange ability to clearly see the past when in the location where it occurred.

Meanwhile, I had been noodling with titles I thought might be good for culinary mysteries. At the same time, I could not imagine bringing anything new to that subgenre. I’ve loved so many books featuring food preparers and sellers from the works of Diane Mott Davidson to those of wonderful blogging partners Debra H. Goldstein, Korina Moss, and Shari Randall. What could I offer that would be unique?

Then, as so often happens for writers, I suddenly had the idea for a scene in my head. It took place in a police detective’s office. He was questioning a young woman who wrote for a weekly newspaper. A killer had used words from the titles of the articles she wrote to determine how each victim died. The articles were about food and their titles each began with the next sequential letter of the alphabet. The young woman thought of that because she wanted to write mysteries, loved Sue Grafton, and needed the job to extend at least 26 weeks.

Was the young woman really the killer or had someone else used her work as a guide? If someone else, it had to be a person in the community or possibly a coworker of the young woman. Was it someone trying to help the young woman advance or trying to frame her?

I’ve used two notebooks to keep my work on each story separated. I’ve developed a writing routine where every day I write first on the new story, then the novel.

So far, I’ve been making progress. I feel good about what I’m achieving.


What do you do when working on multiple projects? Any advice is appreciated!

12 comments:

  1. Good luck, Paula. My normal approach is to concentrate on one until I get to a natural break (or unnatural, such as when I need my subconscious to dig me out of a hole my conscious dug) and then switch to the other.

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  2. I do try to concentrate on one project for at least a few days and other projects tend to drift entirely out of mind. I recently had to respond to an editor's comments on a story that had been accepted for an anthology. I had to sleep on it and allow my subconscious to mull it over before I could remember enough about the story to work on it.

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    Replies
    1. Sleeping on a project or taking a little time away can be a real eye opener. Excellent advice! Thanks, Kathleen!

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  3. Nice premise for your WIP! I look forward to reading more about it.

    I usually write/revise short stories in batches, January and June, because deadlines are usually in spring or late summer and my writing is precise, tighter, with a few characters and short time span. Then I revert to my WIP, which calls for subplots, a longer time frame, and more characters.

    I frequently juggle more than one project, new writing in the morning and revisions on another in the afternoon.

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    Replies
    1. I love how you have your writing organized. This is a great practice. Many thanks!

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  4. I'm not sure I could write more than one manuscript at a time, so more power to you! (Though I am usually reading at least three books at a time, so maybe I do have the capacity...)

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    Replies
    1. Lori, I'll let you know as I progress. Wish me luck!

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  5. The eternal conundrum! Sounds to me that you have found a method that works. Don’t fix it.

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  6. I try not to do that! But I can fit a short story in while writing a novel. I don't think I could do two different novels at once. Good luck!

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