I have a massive bookshelf in the same room, but it's not right next to me. My 28" monitor has probably ruined me for using a laptop, especially when revising.
'Time Bomb'
The Great Write Way, Act Three: Where's the gun?
A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.
I like the differences -- some spaces are very clean, some are totally cluttered. I'm not counting books as clutter, though.
I like writing on my laptop, but I also started writing longhand, so I'm used to writing wherever I want to. And I still like that.
I actually like writing with headphones on, and in the midst of some kind of activity, like at a bookstore or down on the porch with the kids in and out. When it's too quiet and I'm alone, it's too easy to lose my focus, weirdly.
For whatever reason, I've discovered I do better if I start writing out the story longhand for the first page or so and then I'm good to switch over to a keyboard. Not sure why that works, but it's what I end up doing every single time. The only time I ever did everything longhand completely was when I was writing research papers for school. Also, I do my best writing after midnight, of either kind.
I ALWAYS start a story as notes, scribbled ideas longhand in a notebook. It feels ... more intimate that way, maybe?
Or possibly less committed.
Yeah, like it's got a reality besides electrons on my screen. Paper gives it heft and smell and "OMG, I wrote something."
Paper gives it heft and smell and "OMG, I wrote something."
That's what my laser printer is for.
Yeah, but I didn't touch it first, the printer did. And printers run out of ink. Plus, the typeset is anonymous. Writing is in my hand.
Huh. Guess I'm a little on the persnickety side about my writing. It might be a kink, even.
I started the story with an outline, but I didn't really use it much. It provided some good milestones for the plot so things didn't wander though. The story morphed a lot as I went along. Then there is the haunting question of whether the wrong character is the main character.
Yeah, I don't do outlines, except in research papers. In fiction, I find it's more like chess. I get the first 5-6 steps down to get my strategy lined up, but then there's too many permutations available after that to try writing them out. As long as I get to my final destination, the rest is very mutable.
Then there is the haunting question of whether the wrong character is the main character.
Is the problem really who the main character is or more a problem of POV? Or something you can change with a POV change?
I'd have to make loads of changes to switch and have it worth doing. It would probably make for a better story, but it would also be a lot harder to pull off and maybe beyond my ability to really take advantage of.
If everybody who reads it says, "it was (whatever descriptor) but I think X should have been the main character", then I might have to rethink it.