As I began Billie's contemporary romance story,
I knew only that she's a car mechanic with her own business in a small town.
A stranger walks in...or have they met before?
I am not a story plotter, and not for me the structure of the work planned before I begin Chapter One. In my real every day life, I am an organised person, and I used to wonder why I couldn't transfer this inclination to my contemporary romance novels. I'm what is styled among some fiction authors as a 'seat-of-the-pants' writer, not knowing at the start of a story how it would progress; having said that, however, in romance it's accepted that the two protagonists finally get together, so my challenge is to guide them on their journey.
This not-knowing, making it up as I go, is for me part of the enjoyment or writing. I've attended workshops where the intended outcome was a complete plot outline, after which I've tried unsuccessfully to train myself into this. Attempts at constructing a plot before starting a novel ended in confusion and abandonment. While I would still like to be able to do this before I burrow into the story, I've settled into being a 'pantser'.
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Fixing the holes and dealing with other necessary amendments as I find them makes me a slow writer. And when the first draft of this 'seat-of-the-pants' work reaches THE END, it's time to go back to the beginning with a thorough edit. Does it all hang together?
Enjoy your reading. Priscilla.
I may be your opposite. Not really a by the seat of your pants author but I have a general and often specific idea of the story but know nothing about the characters unless I;m writing a series. No matter how you get the story and characters down, keep writing
ReplyDeleteInteresting comment thanks Janet
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