
R&D Studio artwork. Just for fun.
I find rewriting fun. First draft is hard work. It's scary because I set off with an idea and a couple of characters ... and that's it. The story grows.
One of the lists I'm on has been debating the differences between being a Pantser and Plotter.
Plotters plan the whole book beforehand and can write chapter ten before they do chapter four. I can't imagine writing like that. I'm a Pantser (Seat of the Pants writer). I find out what's going on as the characters do. It makes writing the book exciting but hard work, because I'm constantly interrupted by my family, so I have to keep characters, world and narrative threads fresh in my mind over months.
By the time I get around to the rewriting, I can relax and thread through the character layers and subtleties that I look for when I read books. Without a deadline, the temptation is to keep rewriting for ever.
Having worked on some very long multi book narratives now, the only way I can keep it all straight in my head is to create a scene by scene breakdown in a separate document. Then, if I want to insert a character clue in a particular scene, I can find that scene without having to scroll through the document looking for it. I create maps, lists of terms and their meanings, character descriptions (did minor character X have a broken nose?) and I keep spare deleted scenes in a file. Obsessive Compulsive?
I think to be a creative person in any field you have to be a little bit obsessive. In the nicest possible way.
It's nice to know it's not just me that hates the first draft...
ReplyDeleteI much prefer the first draft. By the time the second draft comes around I already know what's going to happen-- I get bored going over and over it again and again.
ReplyDeleteScott R
I love that term - Pantser! It makes me realize what some of my writing problems are (besides a complete disillusionnment with the publishing biz). Thanks!
ReplyDelete