Impromptu writing, whatever comes...on writing or whatever the question of the day is. |
âYou write something and thereâs no reality to it. You canât inject it with any kind of reality. You have to be patient and keep going, and then, one day, you can feel something signaling to you from the innermost recesses. Like a little person trapped under the rubble of an earthquake. And very, very, very slowly you find your way toward the little bit of living impulse.â Deborah Eisenberg I can relate to this quote. I tried to write the prescribed way to create fiction, not that there is anything wrong with that approach, but I could never get going in a happy mood. Prescribed way is to find an idea, create characters to fit that idea, come up with a plot through several steps of outlining and some serious thinking and then, start writing. Of course, some things may change with this method during the course of writing, but the method is tried and true and it works for some/most people. I canât, however, use this method in the prescribed way. Yet, doing the pantser thing alone doesnât work either, because the story goes every which way and it ends up needing some serious editing job, which doesnât agree with my -letâs say- liver. During the last couple of years with the NaNo prep, I did something else. About couple of weeks before the prep, I free-wrote everyday on a general idea. By the time, the prep started I had the basic story in my mind. With that at hand, the prep worked perfectly, and I had little trouble writing during November. What I ended up with has been far from perfect, but both novels with the prep and previous pre-free-writing are better than the earlier âpantserâ ones. Is this the perfect way to create fiction? I still donât think so, because it took some of the fun out of flailing along. Yet, it has its merits. That means Iâm still searching through trial and error what would work for me. I havenât found my personal method yet, and my time is ticking. On the other hand, this may be a good thing in itself. Not my time ticking ![]() Catch 22, isnât it! As another quote goes, maybe applying by behind to the chair in front of the computer and trying over and over again is the way to go. I guess, searching for something is more fun than finding it. In the meantime, Iâll just keep on trying. |