The Writer's Mind

Written by Jeff Heisler


The Writer's Mind

I've always felt that writers aren't smarter or more creative than non-writers. I thinkrepparttar difference between a writer and a non-writer is that a writer doesn't have enough sense to know this should be difficult. Writing and creativity are products ofrepparttar 129518 mind- not extraordinary minds- every mind. You can also tap into this creative power by learning a few simple tricks. Recognize that your brain is awesome, but it has limits. It has a difficult time changing gears from one mode of thinking to another. Remember trying to get through math class right after lunch? Your mind was focused onrepparttar 129519 social realm and until it completedrepparttar 129520 transition, math was unnaturally difficult. The same is true for creativity. Learnrepparttar 129521 creative modes and keep them away from each other. Never try to do two of these atrepparttar 129522 same time. Each has it's own place. Here arerepparttar 129523 modes: • Creative Freestyle- If you''ve ever sat down and scribbled out a great poem without much thinking, this isrepparttar 129524 mode you were in. This is alsorepparttar 129525 mode you’re in when you’re in "the zone." When you’re actually enteringrepparttar 129526 prose and your mind opens like a floodgate- that'srepparttar 129527 freestyle creative mode. In this mode there is no logic and no criticism. If you’re thinking critically or in logical, sequential terms- then you’ll and hamper your creativity. • Logical Freestyle- This isrepparttar 129528 plotting and outlining mode. You should be thinking in practical terms here. Times, dates, events, orders, locations. This isrepparttar 129529 mode of structure and planning. It is creative, but only inrepparttar 129530 sense that you creatively organize. Criticism is still out, and if you find yourself immersed in creative thought that’s not related to logical planning- you're inrepparttar 129531 wrong zone.

Plotting

Written by Jeff Heisler


Plotting

How do you plot a novel? You read your favorite book andrepparttar writer putrepparttar 129516 twists and turns in justrepparttar 129517 right places. The pace was perfect. The excitement built torepparttar 129518 end and them WHAM- What a finish! Howrepparttar 129519 heck to they do that? It's not as hard as you think- really. In fact, plotting is one ofrepparttar 129520 easier and most enjoyable tasks involved in writing your novel. John Grisham agrees. He once told a reporter he loves to plot- but hatesrepparttar 129521 writing. I can understand why. When you're plotting you seerepparttar 129522 story clearly in your own mind. You begin to ask yourself- what if this happened? What if that happened? It's like kindergarten playtime all over again. So if it's so easy how do you do it? I'll tell you, but first you have to know that there is no one single method that works for all writers. You have to get an understanding of what others do and then makerepparttar 129523 process your own. Here's how it works: Step 1- Write your book in two sentences or less. That's right- two sentences. Remember when you looked atrepparttar 129524 movie listings inrepparttar 129525 paper and they had these two sentence descriptions that told you whatrepparttar 129526 movie was about. That's what you have to write first. Why? Becauserepparttar 129527 golden rule of writing is to know what you're writing when you write it. Sure, you can get around this and throw out pages and ideas as you go, a lot of writers have. I think that's wasteful. I've heard several stories of great writers submitting their manuscripts in large trunks- thousands of pages. "The story's in there somewhere- they tellrepparttar 129528 editor." Look- no editor in today's publishing world is going to bother with that. You have to haverepparttar 129529 book done and edited to perfection BEFORE you send it in. That's why you need to write your story's plot in two to three sentences. Anything that you write or plot later must relate to those sentences or they need to be cut- period. Here's an example: Moby Dick- Ahab, a whaleboat captain bent on revenge againstrepparttar 129530 white whale that mauled him, spurs a tired crew acrossrepparttar 129531 ocean in a grand hunt. Ignoringrepparttar 129532 dangers ofrepparttar 129533 sea he becomes consumed with revenge and will do anything to get it. There it is. Hundreds of pages boiled down to two sentences. Melville should have done this exercise himself. He grew as a writer as he wrote more and more- culminating in this great literary classic, but even Moby Dick is flawed in a fundamental way. Melville includes an entire chapter that reads like an encyclopedia of whale biology. There is no story whatsoever in this chapter- just diagrams and descriptions of whales. It is often calledrepparttar 129534 least read chapter in all great literature. Perhaps if Melville had keptrepparttar 129535 heart of his story in mind he would have left that chapter out- or at least put it in an appendix. Boil down your story into 2 sentences and stay within those sentences. Do this first. You will have to do it eventually when you submit to publishers and agents- so you might as well do it now and benefit fromrepparttar 129536 sharp focus it provides. Step 2- Get out your index cards. Get a bunch of 'em, whatever size you like. Now sit and think about your story. Are there scenes and events that pop to mind? Jot them down. No detail here- just enough to remind you whatrepparttar 129537 card is about. Writerepparttar 129538 cards in any order. The LAST thing you want to do is to force yourself to think of these scenes in a linear way (see my column onrepparttar 129539 writer's mind for more detail.) Just jot down every scene you can think of. Some scenes will give you ideas for others. Just keep going. When you're tired put them down and review them later. Add more (don't take any out, even if you've decided you probably won't use them.) Keep adding cards and scenes until you just can't think of any more ideas. By now you're probably excited because you're getting a great view ofrepparttar 129540 story and you can't wait to start writing. Well- wait anyway. There's more to do. Step 3- Organize your cards. Now'srepparttar 129541 time to put them in order. Keep two things in mind- first, unless you're doing weird things withrepparttar 129542 timeline- everything should be linear. Event A should be followed by event B and so on. Don't do B,T,Z,P,A, or some darned thing unless you really, really know what you're doing. If this is your first book, I wouldn't even think about it. A-B-C, 1-2-3. Keep it nice and simple.

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