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NaNoWriMo Tip #28: No Fail Formula to Write Any Scene

Cut hard scenes down to size.

Some scenes are daunting.

Especially endings. The final showdown? The shocking reveal? The declaration of love? The dawning insight into the Meaning Of It All?

What might cause you to stumble on a hard scene?

1. Perfectionism. 
Maybe this is a pivotal scene, or the climax of the story, and you want it to be PERFECT. After all, if the pivot isn’t clear the whole rest of the story will fail… if the ending sucks, the book will be ruined… Ahhggggg!  The pressure!

2. Flow. 
You’ve dreamed of this scene but now that you sit down to write it, you realize it’s not working. For some reason it’s not flowing from the previous scene or into the following scene.

3. Ignorance. 
You’ve never written this kind of scene before. Maybe it’s suppose to be romance, and you’re used to action, or it’s supposed to be a chase scene but you’re used to writing witty repartee at garden parties.

4. Emotion. 
This scene is supposed to be funny or poignant or scary, but you don’t know how to convey the emotion. When you try it comes out flat, or worse, you don’t even know where to begin.

5. Action.
 The scene has lot of action (perhaps a battle or a disaster) and you’re not sure how to block it. It either comes out too short (everything compressed into one or two paragraphs) or as a mechanical blow-by-blow recitation of the action.

Fortunately, there’s a No Fail Formula to tackle hard scenes. You’ve no doubt heard about how to eat an elephant…one bite at a time. Same with hard scenes.

No Fail Formula to Write Any Scene:

Step One: Break it down.

Let’s say you start with a chapter. If you haven’t already, break the chapter down into scenes. Write one line for each scene, explaining what change takes place. Now break down the scene into its own beats, again simply summarizing what change takes place. Now take each of those beats, and if necessary, break those down too. By this time, you’ll probably find yourself at the sentence level, writing out what happens, but don’t get hung up on the beauty of those sentences. If you need to remind yourself, put them in bullet points to remind yourself that this is still “notes” for your scene, not the scene itself. At the same time, write in the same Tense and Person (and PoV character) as the scene will be. If any beautiful or witty prose sneaks through, it will be ready to use. (Nothing is more aggravating than having to change all your sentences from third person present tense to first person past tense.)

At this point, you should find that the scene makes sense logistically, if nothing else. The story flows through it logically from the scene before to the scene after. If you’ve noted every beat in the scene, you can choose to leave it in this state while you push on to the end of the book. Technically, everything after this is revision.

Step Two: Study up on the tricks of the trade.
Now that you have the scene blocked out in the blandest, least challenging notes-only-form as possible, you can begin to worry about making it shine with whatever mood you need. There are known techniques for making a reader feel emotion while reading and this is where you apply them. If you don’t know them,

Is this scene supposed to be scary? Review how to frighten readers. Sexy and romantic? Study up on sizzle. Exciting? Check out the rules of thrillers and fight scenes. Funny? Research humor. Yes, you can learn to be funny.

Or say that all you want is to write gorgeous, yet not purple, prose. Read up on the Sentence or re-read your favorite authors to inspire you.

This is also the place where you Search and Destroy:

… all cliches;
… over used “favorite” words or expressions and destroy them;
… excess words.

Here’s a secret: You can learn to write any emotion, if you study and practice.

Which brings us to the third step.

Step Three: Write three versions of each key sentence.

What? THREE? At least three. However many versions it takes.  (If you are a perfectionist who tends to get stuck endlessly rewriting the first chapter of your book for three years, give yourself an upper limit too — no more than 5 versions of each sentence, then you must pick one of those five versions no matter how “bad.”)

You don’t have to do this with EVERY sentence (perfectionists, take this warning to heart!), but with “key sentences.” It’s up to you to decide what sentences are key.

You may do more at this point than change sentences.

Let’s say that you’ve read Rayne Hall’s book Writing Scary Scenes and you’ve discovered that one trick is to have your hero walk through a door before entering a scary situation. You didn’t have a door in your scene before, but it’s not hard to add (it’s important that you not make convoluted changes at this point). Before, the scene began with the hero in the room with the corpse. Now you insert an extra sentence or two about the hero knocking on the door, which swings open eerily…already unlocked. You’ve learned that this is a threshhold moment which can dramatically increase the suspense, so that makes it a Key Sentence. You write between three and five versions. Then pick the best.

If you prefer these Tips as an ebook you can buy it here for $0.99:

 

How To Sell Your Books On Nook UK

Great news! 

NOOK is now available in the United Kingdom and that means you can reach even more readers when you publish your eBooks through PubIt! We have added new features to PubIt! so that your eBooks will be available for sale in the UK on NOOK.co.uk (if you have indicated that you have Worldwide Rights to your titles).

Our new UK functionality will automatically convert your US pricing to an equivalent UK pricing in GBP (£). If you prefer to set your own UK list price, follow these quick steps:

  • Select Actions>Edit next to your titles in the My Titles tab in the PubIt! dashboard.
  • In section 1, you will see a new field called “List Price (UK)”
  • Uncheck the box next to “auto calculate UK price based on US price”, and then enter your desired UK pricing in GBP (£).
  • Click “Calculate My Royalty” to see your royalty for each UK sale
  • Scroll down to Section 6, check the checkbox next to “I confirm that I have all legal rights…”, and click “Save & Post Changes”.

Help! I’m Just Starting #NaNoWriMo! (Emergency Tip Day 4)

Help! I’m Just Starting #NaNoWriMo! (Emergency Tip Day 4)

Planning
Day One: Refine Your  Idea – Brainstorm a Log Line and create a Beat Sheet
Day Two: Expand Your Idea – Deepen Your Characters and Spice up Your Plot
Day Three:  Outline Your Novel – Create a Scene by Scene Outline
Day Four: Outline Your Scenes – Scene Helper
Writing
Day Five: Draft Your Scenes – From Scene to Draft – First Third of Your Novel
Day Six: Keep Going on that Draft – Second Third of Your Novel 
Day Seven: Wow, you have a whole extra day to write, plenty of time – Third Third.

Day 4: Outline Your Scenes

Tip #20: Scene Helper

Here’s some other steps to do on Day Four:

NaNoWriMo Tip #27: Get Back The Mood, Push to Finish!

 With any luck, you know that wonderful pressure at the back of the head that comes when you are almost finished with a book and you HAVE TO FINISH IT NOW!

I’ve experienced that. (So has my family, poor schmoes.)

However, I’ve also had to reverse problem, rather more often. In fact, I’m having it right now. I’m almost done writing out my Tips, and because I’m ALMOST done, some whacked part of my mind feels as if I AM done.

Imagine a marathon runner who comes within sight of the Finish Line and says, “Ok, I see the end. I’m done here.” And stops running before he crosses the line.

That’s me.

I see the end in sight and something deep inside says, “Right, then, let’s get on to the next project.” Then Something Shiny distracts me and I’m off. Forcing myself to finish those last three chapters, or that last 5,000 words or the final showdown between the white hat and black hat…. Holy Gamoly, Batman! We’re doomed!

7 Tricks to Beat Fear of Completion

To entice, force, trick myself into finishing, I’ve come up with several strategies.
 
1. I buy myself a completely self-indulgent present, wrap it, and don’t let myself open it until I’ve finished. It’s usually inexpensive and childish—like a Katniss Barbie doll—to deliberately reward the childlike part of me, which, I suspect, is the source of most of my impatience to get on to the next project. It’s usually something I would never buy for myself, and that no one else would buy for me. Once I got a massage! Another time I just bought Twizzlers. Obviously, your choice of self-gift will be highly personal.

2. I write the last scene, then the next to last scene, and so on, until I meet up with the spot I stopped. This works best if I’m already very close to the end.

3. I skip the hard scenes and go for the low hanging fruit. I don’t do this most of the time, by the way. I prefer to start with the hardest scenes first, and use the easy scenes as rewards. But if I’m hard pressed, I’ll take the low road.

4. I write at least the first sentence of each remaining scene. Again, this only works if you have a pretty clear idea of what scenes remain.

5. I write the Script (dialogue only) of remaining scenes.

6. I break down each scene into subparts and focus on finishing one subpart at a time. I write each scene and sub-scene on a To Do list and check it off as I go, so I have a sense of forward progress, however incremental. (I’ll go into more detail on this method tomorrow.)

7. I take a lot of caffeine and stay up 24 hours, and just keep writing like a madwoman, until I collapse. Not really recommended, but it does work.

Getting Back the Mood

Suppose you have either (A) veered off track, or (B) lost steam on your novel or (C) had to deal with other crazy stuff in Real Life and become derailed completely.

You can either (A) take a break from your novel for a while. Yes, even if you didn’t “win.” Yes, even if it’s not “over.” Really, it’s okay.
Or (B) do some fun stuff to re-ignite your passion for your book.
Here are some things I do when I get off course:
1.     Talk about my novel to a sympathetic person. (It’s imperative this person not be a downer.)
2.     Talk about my novel to myself. Yes, I talk to myself. I am a writer. I’m allowed to be crazy.
3.     Write a page about why I love my novel.
5.     Reread what I wrote.

If you prefer these Tips as an ebook you can buy it here for $0.99:

 

Update on #NaNoWriMo 26: Shiny Attack!!!

Thing are going well with my NaNoWriMo novel, but if you were paying close attention you may have noticed me slobbering after a Shiny New idea…. another novel earlier in the series, September Knight.

I have the best of reasons to think about September Knight. It comes before October Knight. (Obviously.) And one should really know the events of the prequel first…riiiiiiight?

Anyway, when attempting to ward off an attack of the Killer Shiny, it’s best to throw it some meat. So I’ve gone ahead and written down the beat sheet, and some of the outline. Then I returned to my novel.

Work-in-Progress: “Thinking and Writing Are Different” and More Grea…

Work-in-Progress: “Thinking and Writing Are Different” and More Grea…: Some great advice from the Writer’s Digest Conference, via writers Anna Leahy and Douglas Dechow:

“Thinking and writing are different,” Bender said. You may have great ideas in your mind, but “the only book that exists is the one on the page.” The process of writing is not one of translating your thoughts onto the page. No, it’s the other way around. “Writing gives us access to our own minds.”