I'm super excited to host Angela Ackerman, co-author of The Emotion Thesaurus! I used her reference book to create varied character reactions while writing my NaNoWriMo draft last month. Here, she shares strategies on how to take that draft and prepare for revision.
Beauty or The Beast: What To Do Before Revising A Nano
Novel
The month of November is a bit of a
sugar high, isn’t it? There’s Nanowrimo, and the stream of words fueled by
coffee, old Halloween candy, Kraft Dinner and not enough sleep. The Muse is
fired up, leading us down the Yellow Brick Road and we follow at full throttle,
writing whatever craziness comes to mind. Then there’s the ultimate high:
achieving the 50K! Writing The End.
There’s fireworks. Tears. Maybe cupcakes and bacon. Huzzah! We are MASTERS OF THE
UNIVERSE.
And then comes that not-so-delightful...December...crash.
We have a novel. It is a mess. We feel like we’ve just woken up to a strange
noise in the dead of night, sure a Stephen King-esque monster is under the
bed. We play online Scrabble and wish
people Happy Birthday on Facebook rather than edge the mouse toward the ‘open
file’ button.
Life After Nano: Moving Forward
Because Nanowrimo focuses on the creative
process rather than slow and steady technique, I think writers need to approach
rewrites differently than with something written over the course of a few months
or half a year. Here’s some food for thought!
Take Advantage Of The Process
One great thing about Nano is that we’ve
written it so fast, the character’s journey is fresh in our mind from first
page to last. Take this opportunity to make some notes to yourself and ask
these three questions:
1)
What plot twists/ideas/story elements did I love best?
2)
What parts of the book am I pretty sure need to change?
3)
What ideas have sprung to mind since finishing that I might want to go back and
incorporate?
While the story is fresh, you’ll want to
capture these answers. If you don’t get this down, you may forget the good
ideas that writing the story generated. Maybe you had a brainwave for an
earlier scene but didn’t want to lose the flow, so you promised yourself you’d add
it during revisions. Or perhaps over the course of the book, you realized the
logic didn’t work somewhere and it would require retooling. Are there plot
holes? Events that need foreshadowing? Make copious notes-everything that comes
to mind.
Finally, answer one more question:
4)
What worked and what didn’t with each character?
If you’re anything like me, you get to
know your characters as you write. They evolve, too. Make notes on each--things
you really like and things you need to develop. Who still needs fleshing out?
Who needs motivation for things they do (or don’t) do? Who developed a quirk
partway in which needs to be added right from the start?
Let Your Novel Sleep
All writers know the power of time. For
some, hearing that they should shelve this book for awhile is music, while
others want to rip into it right away to see how bloody the waters will get. Resist the urge to read your Nano right
after writing it. Give it time to settle. Let your notes about the book
steep. Wait two
weeks to a month, whichever feels right to you.
Pull That Sucker Out Of The Closet
It’s time to find the Beauty in your
Supposed Beast. Set aside time to read your novel and try to do it within a
short period. You want to be able to view the book as a whole, not as parts.
But
before you start, tell yourself two things:
First
drafts are never as bad as writers think they will be.
I
will read this as a reader, not as a writer.
Do not make corrections. Do not fix
typos. Read your novel for the story and characters. Appreciate
the journey that your creative brain sent you on and don’t let your Internal Editor interfere. If he starts
to rant at you, shove him in a room full of virtual clowns. :)
After you’ve read your manuscript, bask
in ALL THE GOOD THINGS. There are pearls, rubies, diamonds, even! Then, pull
out those notes you made. Go through them and challenge your initial thoughts
and beliefs. Do you still believe X is a plot hole? That Character Y needs to
be cut from the manuscript?
Does Z subplot still make sense?
Add To Your Notes
Delete what you no longer agree with,
and add new ideas to what you want to develop. Think about bigger problems you
noticed, and mull over how you might fix them.
Finally,
sit back and reread what you’ve written, because these
notes are your pathway to revision. You now have a place to start, the big issues lined out. Choose what you want
to focus on first. Maybe like me, you want to fix all the typos before you dig
in. Or you want to finalize the bones of the plot, or develop your lead
character. Maybe you decide to see how your novel stands up to a Save The Cat Beat Sheet. Whatever
you choose, come back to these notes for ideas and inspiration and remember how
many published books out there started just like yours...a simple Nano
challenge!
Angela Ackerman is a Canadian who writes on the darker side of middle grade and young adult and blogs at the award winning resource, The Bookshelf Muse She is also a co-author of The Emotion Thesaurus: A Writer’s Guide To Character Expression, a writer's guide to help navigate the challenging terrain of showing character emotion. This brainstorming tool explores seventy-five emotions and provides a large selection of body language, internal sensations, actions and thoughts associated with each. Written in an easy-to-navigate list format, readers can draw inspiration from character cues that range in intensity to match any emotional moment.