also The 90-day novel and Nancy Kress' Beginnings, Middles, and Ends.
Two totally different approaches.
A place for Buffistas to discuss, beta and otherwise deal and dish on their non-fan fiction projects.
also The 90-day novel and Nancy Kress' Beginnings, Middles, and Ends.
Two totally different approaches.
I'll try all of those. beginnings middels and ends sounds especially promising, cause "middles" is my worst weakness.
I might look into some of those books too. I have an idea that I have had kicking around for a while, the characters and setting are very clear to me, but I have no idea how to actually plot out a novel.
Second Sight by Cheryl Klein (an editor at Scholastic) is pretty good. I have a copy. It covers more than plot, but I like how it deals with both the physical plot and the emotional plot of the story.
must resist buying more books
Thanks Amy, Sox, and Gudanov. I realize that I need to push through my resistance to writing, whatever the hell it is that keeps me from ever finishing a project. And plot is a big part of my resistance.
I've got the plot, I just hate my character in this scene. And if I skip this scene and do the part I want, I'll never get back to it. Like saying you'll eat your green beans after you eat the mashed potatoes.
Endings are my great white whale; they task me, they task me.
Next chunk is up; this section is unfinished, but maybe tomorrow, the good Lord willing and the Russian spambot trolls don't rise?
Wow, to be in the presence of the last True Artist writing today! This rationalization is so huge, it's bigger than Jared Padalecki. I sort of can't believe people let him publish that.
Congrats on the writing JZ.
After some note-making, thinking, and making an outline of plot adjustments, I think I'm about ready to start on Cog rev. 4.5.