X
    Categories: Uncategorized

My Fiction Writing Process–the Different Phases of Creating a Story

Two hundred pages done! I’m now at the point where I know what is going to happen in the rest of my new novel, Winter Tears. I have the remaining seven or eight scenes mapped out and all I need to do is get the words written. Phew! I think I can finish this first draft by the end of next week.

Usually, my first drafts are about forty to fifty pages shorter than the final version because I’m getting the basic plot and subplots down on the first writing. During the rewrite, knowing now that the story works, I go back in and add more details and possibly another subplot or two.

For me, those two phases of the novel writing process are pretty different from each other. The first draft phase is usually kind of exploratory. I have ideas in mind, but make changes as the story unfolds. It’s exciting, but also scary because I’m always questioning whether my ideas will come together and really work the way I hope. The rewriting phase is easier because it’s mainly a matter of turning the manuscript into a publishable book that readers will want to read.

After the rewrite comes the final phase, which is the editing–or some people call it the polishing. That’s fun because it’s when the book begins to really look like a finished book. The not-so-fun part is that the writer and editor are getting to a point where they’ve read it so many times that they would really like to take a break from it.

Well, the final phase of writing isn’t really the final phase of getting a book ready, but it’s close. A book needs a cover, a book blurb, etc. That’s for another blog post.

susanfinlay :

View Comments (10)

  • Congratulations!!! Way to go. By the way, I agree... the first part is so much fun and, as you say, exploratory. Can't wait until your book is published. :)

  • It's so interesting to find out how different writers go about the task. You and I are opposites. I always write too much and my first revision then consists of deciding what to cut.

    • Thanks, thedamari. I know a lot of writers who go about the task the same way you do. I'm not sure which is easier, but both ways work.

  • I've been poking about on your blog due to your series of writers tackling a different aspect of writing :)
    I make a plan for my stories so I've got a skeleton to hang it on, but... inevitably it all changes during the first draft and the second draft. Characters decide to do things sooner or later than I plan, or I suddenly realise what they were supposed to do is too difficult to plan, or other characters pop up who I didn't expect. So I'm a planner not a pantser but it doesn't all go to plan...!

    • Catherine, I am like you. I now consider myself part planner and part pantser. I start out with a plan and a partial outline, but as I write, things often change. I think it's a good thing that we're willing to make changes as we go along. It means we are letting the characters do what they need to do.