Getting Started Writing a Novel
Our completely unscientific poll suggests that getting
started is one of the biggest obstacles for novel writers (of course, there’s a
bias towards procrastinators who are reading blogs about writing and completing polls
rather than getting on with it, but we’ll gloss over that for now).
Now, ‘getting started’ could mean one of two things (or
possibly others we haven’t thought of). It could be about getting the idea in
the first place, it could be about getting a first draft out once you know what
you want to write about.
Our experience is that most writers are bubbling over with
ideas that are just dying to get out, so coming up with an idea in the first
place is not usually a problem. However, if it is, then there are a few methods
you can use to come up with your kernel, which can be expended into a premise
and eventually a first draft.
Ways to find inspiration for your novel:
One is to ‘fill out the boxes’ in our premise, including the
major story elements of: character, situation, objective, opponent and disaster.
If you think this might be for you, read the full article here.
Another is to look for inspiration in the world around you.
This could be anything from reading the newspapers (and not just doing the Sudoku),
people watching, reading movie synopses or watching real life documentaries.
You can read more about these methods here.
Ways to get the first draft out
We’re kind of big on planning and using techniques to make
something really difficult (writing a novel) a bit less difficult. To this end,
we think the best way to get to a first draft is to work up to it bit by bit,
starting with a premise, expanding that into an outline, threading in some detail and ending up with quite a clear structure. Once you’ve got this
structure, the first draft just flies out as all you have to worry about is
prose.
However, if you don’t like to plan everything through first,
that’s fine too. In that case there are a few things you can do to get started,
from starting a few chapters in (often the pressure of writing the first line
can be paralysing), visualising the scene in your mind and then describing it
or thinking about to simply refusing to allow yourself to get up until you’ve
written the first five hundred words. If you're really having trouble with your first draft, perhaps you should consider going the planning route...
details in the first draft - just thrash it out, however awful you think it is at the time. It’s never going to be perfect first time, it’s going to be rough and ready and it’s going to need a great deal of polishing, so don’t get hung up on this adjective or that order. Just get it out!
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