Lessons I have learnt about writing novels - Planning
| I feel vaguely human again today - or at least vaguely fish. Certainly animal as opposed to vegetable. And I was going to write about planning... When it comes to any creative project you can name, there are some of us who plan meticulously so that everything is perfect first time and there are those that rush in and spend the time perfecting things later on. Both methods have their merits and their pitfalls. Sometimes it is necessary to do a little bit of forward planning – if you’re painting on a canvas in oils, you can paint over any mistakes, but with watercolours, slip up bad and you’re in trouble. At other times, it helps to get hands-on as soon as possible. If you have never used clay before, you’re going to have to have a few practice-runs before you get the final piece so you might as well get on and get your fingers dirty. The point I’m trying to get to is that it strikes me that, when it comes to fiction, planning is an entirely personal thing. For me, I always rush in with stuff, but then there are certain points where I have had to stop and organise myself better with, for example, a timeline of events to help me keep a hold of the order of things. Next time I will probably be much more organised. There are only a few tips I would give from my experience.
Labels: Advice, General Nonsense, Novel Writing |





Comments on "Lessons I have learnt about writing novels - Planning"
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Charlesdawson said ... (3:52 PM) :
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marmiteboy said ... (7:55 PM) :
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Becca said ... (1:25 PM) :
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Charlesdawson said ... (2:53 PM) :
post a commentHi Goldfish, I am glad you are feeling better.
About planning a novel: in his autobiographies, Dornford Yates claims that he never planned a book (he wrote thrillers and comedies in the 1920s and 30s). He claimed he was always as surprised by how it came out as were his readers.
On the other hand, F Scott Fitzgerald planned his novels meticulously, practically drawing flowcharts of the action.
So it takes all sorts...
Hi glad you're feeling a bit better.
I don't think I could ever write a book. I never plan anything I write (which is probably evident frommy blog entries). I have to do a fair bit of writing on technical subjects for my job and it's probably a failing of mine that I never plan. I'm a great one for editing afterwards. I would love to be a planner, it would certainly be beneficial, but I don't think I ever will now.
I'm sure you'll finish the book by the way.
Glad you're back in the land of the vertebrate, Goldfish.
I'd offer some soup but I've probably contaminated it with Fresher's Bug germs by now.
Hope you keep feeling better...
I have just read that EM Forster claimed he didn't know what really happened in the Marabar caves even *after* he'd finished writing the book.