People have asked me - How do I write? Well I’m sure that every writer has his own way of writing and I am no different. For those who are interested here is my two-pennyworth.
Momentum is the important thing for me – it is the key. Sometimes this is just not there and every word seems to need extracting like some precious ore chiselled from the ground. When the momentum is there however I do everything I can to keep it going. This is where the asterisk (*) comes in. Anything that I write that needs verification or more research gets an asterisk (*). I then have to return to these (*) at a later date. For me it is about – keep writing. Rewriting and editing come later.
I use a word document that remains open every time I sit at my laptop. This contains the current chapter that I am working on. At the same time however I have a number of other word documents open – this keeps everything I need to hand to maintain that momentum.
- A document entitled – Research/name of the novel. This contains my original conceptual notes for the novel. Added to this is any further research that I have undertaken, and this is often very extensive. These research notes are added to as the book develops; a story line or back-story may open up to me and require further research.
- A document entitled General Notes. This contains writing style prompts, built up over the years and under subheadings; e.g.
1. 1. Descriptions: e.g. a hard wicked face, blue-jowlled, craggy, long chiselled cheeks, inexorable eyes. Wore his hair long. Silver-tongued, an anaemic look, pale blue eyes took your full attention so that you gaze never dwelt on anything but them.
- Conversation i.e. the ways people talk. e.g. Sniffed, grunted, grumbled, groaned, mumbled, griped, murmured, rumbled, screeched, squealed, cried, screamed, enquired.
- Word sounds. E.g. Ah, Argh, Mmm, Err, Erm, Huh, Ugh, Oy.
- Phrases. e.g. His eyes gave a flash of anger. He felt himself shiver, but his eyes told a different story, He felt that he was being torn apart, He darted a look.
- A document entitled Authors Notes – these will eventually be printed t the end of the story as part of the published book. This starts out as a blank document for each novel but I enter anything that the reader may want to know that I deemed unnecessary to include in the narrative or would stand as ‘authors voice,’ if my character would not say them. E.g. Up to 1837, a marriage ceremony was required to be performed in a consecrated building. Julia and David would not have been allowed to have been married in the gaol therefore. This inaccuracy has been allowed for dramatic affect.
- A document entitled Punctuation. This contains a brief of common punctuation uses, apostrophes, commas, colons and semi colons, hyphens, brackets etc
- Finally I have a prompt at all times, immediately below the line I am typing the story on. This is constantly in my eye-line so that I don’t deviate from what I am trying to do. It says the following:
THINK – HEAR - SMELL – TOUCH – SEE – TASTE
Open with big question or hook/INTRIGUE.
Then you have the problems your hero is up against/ CONFLICT.
That builds to the CLIMAX.
Followed by the RESOLUTION
Then you have the problems your hero is up against/ CONFLICT.
That builds to the CLIMAX.
Followed by the RESOLUTION