Pantsers, let me hear your wild hollers!
Plotters, wave your notebooks and charts from side to side!
I used to consider myself a die-hard Pantser. Character
questionaires bored me to tears. Outlines made me gnaw my fingers into bloody
stumps. What I wanted was the thrill of raw discovery--the kind you get from the
twist in that scene even you didn’t see coming.
But I paid for this thrill in countless revisions. The lack
of character prep left me with characters I didn’t know, who only became clear
after waaaaay too many rewrites. There were a few surprising twists, sure, but
there were also plot holes and disconnected…things. All the things were
disconnected.
With my current WIP, I wanted to avoid all that. I wanted to
learn from my past mistakes instead of rewriting them. My CP encouraged me to
try plotting, and she ensured me that in her plotting, she’s still surprised by
the unexpected turns.
Well, folks, I tried plotting. I’m still trying it. And I
have to say, there’s no turning back. This is revision number one for my WIP,
but the story’s so different from the first, un-plotted draft that I may as
well be writing a whole different story. I understand my characters on such a
deep level. I’m figuring out the twists and turns and still getting giddy over
them. All the things are connecting. It’s bliss. There’s no doubt in my mind
this will cut my future revision time, which means less work. Who doesn’t like
less work?
In case anyone’s curious as to how I’ve gone about this plotting thing I love so much, here’s the sauce: K.M. Weiland's website. Yes. I suggest going through her How to Write Character Arcs series and answering the questions at the bottom of each post. The questions provoked me to explore my MC’s character arc within the plot on a much deeper level than I ever would have on my own.
If you give it a try, I’d love to hear your experience! And
what better time than in October, to prep you for NaNoWriMo in November!?
Write on,
Jessie
Write on,
Jessie
:-) I liked this post, and definitely followed the link you provided. I like KM Weiland's tips. Thanks.
ReplyDeletei also use character arcs when planning. No traditional outline for me, but character arcs a must.
ReplyDelete