Sunday 18 January 2015

Mapping Things Out.



            So it's a new year! And, obviously, I've made a writing related resolution - yes, you guessed it; I plan to finish a novel! In a year, you ask? It's not actually unrealistic. If I write ten thousand words in a month, which is only two and a half thousand a week, then I'll have a hundred thousand words done by October. Two months of the hair shredding, stress wrangling process known as 'editing' sounds a good amount of time to spend on it.
           
            How am I going to get it done, though? Maintaining vision and focus over such an extended period is no mean feat - that is one of the talents of a truly dedicated writer. Keeping a cohesive and consistent story together is difficult, and it's easy to lose yourself - and your plot - in the exploration of a story. A lot of writer's - myself included - will tell you that 'they don't know exactly where the story is going'. This doesn't mean we, they or you don't have a plan for the story, just that they haven't picked all the bells and whistles for it. It's in choosing these bells and whistles that writers can lose their focus and direction.

            After exploring a magnificent side story or addition to the main plot it can be difficult to return to the central story. Often I find myself re-reading the section or sections before where I intend to continue writing from to re-immerse myself, which can be arduous or annoying. The other stymieing factor is not knowing what the connecting elements of your story are - you know that you want to make a meal but not exactly what you need in it to make it a masterpiece of culinary art. You're aware there needs to be some nutritional content - probably vegetables- a bit of seasoning and some meat, because everybody loves meat. But which meat? And what about vegetarians?

            So you need some guidelines, a plan; a recipe. Writers - and directors - sometimes use a storyboard, which is a series of short paragraphs or captioned images. This gives a general outline of the plot and some basic story elements. At this point I will explain how I differentiate between 'plot' and 'story' so we're working with the same definitions;
            Plot: A series of events involving the same or related characters.
            Story: A detailed description of those events & how the characters react to them.

            Using these definitions it is clear that plot is a much simpler construct that the story. Another analogy for the difference is that your plot is the structure of a house and the story is the contents, furnishings and decorations which it a home. What I'm trying to highlight here is that a plot is only a fraction of the length of its story. In a hundred thousand word story, your pot will be somewhere around two to four thousand words.

            So write that plot! Get it down, even in untidy, scrawled shorthand. You'll have it for reference throughout your entire story, guiding you and keeping you focused on what's happening, what's going to happen and what needs to happen. It doesn't mean you can't chop and change your plot, rewrite it or recreate it; it's written in shorthand not stone!
           
            I sincerely believe this will help keeep your story on course through stormy times or low tides of writing. I know it will be helpful for myself, & I know other members of my writing group use the method. Maps - city, country, world - can also help your visualise your world as you write. Just make sure they're relevant to your plot if you intend to use them - it's all very well exploring your world but if you mapout a whole continent for a plot and story that only takes place within one city it's a bit more than your reader needs, and probably wants. Enjoy plotting your story's course. Keep it short, simple and mostly unembellished so that the story can flesh it out. Good luck, and don't lose your way!