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Ways of writing a story!

Ernest Bywater ๐Ÿšซ

In this thread I am not talking about the mechanics of how to write or what style of writing, but the processes you use in creating the story.

I'm a great believer in the 'finish the story and edit it before you publish it' crowd. That means I usually have a number of partly written stories I'm working on at times.

While it's a good idea to plan out the whole story from start to finish then just get in and write it in a few sittings that rarely happens with me. I'll often think of a good plot, or a good character, or a good situation for a story and then I write that down while I remember it. Later I'll go back to that and work on expanding it to be a full story by adding extra parts along the way. To further muddy the waters I'll often be working a story down Path A when I find my characters want to go down Path B and they won't co-operate until I take that path too.

The result is I now have 38 part written stories for 688,000 words, none of which tie into each other well, so I can't stitch them into a one story. I have had other ideas that I have been able to add on to an existing part written story and that makes up for that issue. Of those stories 11 are sequels to existing stories, plus there are a few other stories I'd like to write sequels too but have not yet started on. There are also a couple of stories which started life as 'what if I take this story in another direction' and I then worked out ways to make a new story based on the old plot but going off in another direction - that can sometimes be hard in coming up with a new way to establish the situation and characters. I do like to come up with an interesting character then put them in an intriguing situation and see what I can develop from that.

Thus I now have some stories where I have the middle written and am working out how to get there, some with the end written and I am working on how to get there, some with the start written and am not sure where to go right now, and some where I have a character who is interesting but not yet sure what I'm going to do with them, and some that's a mix of two or more of these.

When actually creating there are times I can write anywhere between 20,000 to 100,000 words in a single sitting, and others where I'm lucky to end up with 500 to 1,000 words on the page - often actually typing four or five times that number due to making changes.

I'm sure that of the 4,756,000 words in completed and published stories I actually wrote nearer 14,000,000 words to settle on what is in the current published versions.

Anyway, the point of this thread is to let people know there are many ways to start and work on a story, and to not be discouraged if your way is not what you read others say is the way they use. Each author should write in the way they see is right for them and that includes the way they create the story and the characters as well as how they write the story.

If anyone has other thoughts on this or uses other processes, please feel free to post a response stating them.

Romulus twin ๐Ÿšซ

@Ernest Bywater

Anyway, the point of this thread is to let people know there are many ways to start and work on a story, and to not be discouraged if your way is not what you read others say is the way they use. Each author should write in the way they see is right for them and that includes the way they create the story and the characters as well as how they write the story.

My stories are written on the go. Nothing is pre-planned.
Forty years of work and hundreds of varying personalities encountered, it's practically written itself.
Tried a scifi story, but it got a bit out there so I abandoned it.
My advice is to stay as close to your wheelhouse as you can. I don't know shit about a lot of things, but the things I do know, I know well through living it.
Characters can come from real life personalities you've meet and know with some slight modifications. Especially those lively characters with a gift for bullshit.

If you've been in the military, it's only natural that your characters would reflect that. Sailed a boat? The same.

My advice would be to take an event in your real life and write about it. You might find yourself surprised at what you turn out. I sure as hell did.

Replies:   Pixy  Dominions Son  Grey Wolf
Pixy ๐Ÿšซ

@Romulus twin

My advice is to stay as close to your wheelhouse as you can. I don't know shit about a lot of things, but the things I do know, I know well through living it.

Well god darn it... I've gone for the complete opposite... The reason that I have written what I have, is because I haven't done them... In fact, I had written my first several stories on here as a virgin....LOL

Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@Romulus twin

My advice is to stay as close to your wheelhouse as you can. I don't know shit about a lot of things, but the things I do know, I know well through living it.

That would preclude anyone from ever writing any kind of far future science fiction, high fantasy, or alternate history stories. Seems to me to be terrible advice.

Replies:   helmut_meukel
helmut_meukel ๐Ÿšซ

@Dominions Son

@Romulus twin

My advice is to stay as close to your wheelhouse as you can. I don't know shit about a lot of things, but the things I do know, I know well through living it.

That would preclude anyone from ever writing any kind of far future science fiction, high fantasy, or alternate history stories. Seems to me to be terrible advice.

It's a real good advice for writing contemporary stories.

With far future SF, high fantasy, alternate history etc. it's different: none of your audience has real life experience with what you describe. Your description might clash with what's regarded as canon by other authors e.g. vampires and sunlight, and you might have to tell the reader that vampires are not nocturnal, but they let the mundanes believe in this misconception.

HM.

Dominions Son ๐Ÿšซ

@helmut_meukel

It's a real good advice for writing contemporary stories.

Maybe, but that's not the way Romulus twin stated it.

Romulus twin ๐Ÿšซ

@helmut_meukel

With far future SF, high fantasy, alternate history etc. it's different: none of your audience has real life experience with what you describe.

Which is why I ditched the attempt at SF.

Grey Wolf ๐Ÿšซ

@Romulus twin

My advice is to stay as close to your wheelhouse as you can. I don't know shit about a lot of things, but the things I do know, I know well through living it.

Aka 'write what you know'. I tend to consider this good advice for starting authors, or at least those whose muse isn't pointing them at sci-fi/fantasy/horror/etc.

However, it's limited. Pick your favorite dead-tree author. Most of them (I suspect) branch out very, very far from their wheelhouse over time.

I've read excellent stories about the military by people who've never served, about police from people who never wore a badge, and about politics from people who've never run for office. Most murder-mystery authors have never been around a murder nor solved one.

People are people, however. That guy in the murder mystery? He might be a lot like cousin Fred (even though cousin Fred hasn't been around any murders, either, in real life).

'Write what you know' is a crutch - a valuable crutch, but a crutch. It'll get you going, but it'll also impede your progress over time if you can't cast it aside.

Replies:   Romulus twin
Romulus twin ๐Ÿšซ

@Grey Wolf

Maybe it is a crutch. Can't say as I particularly care.
The OP ask a question so I answered it. I never said it was the only or best answer.

whisperclaw ๐Ÿšซ

@Ernest Bywater

I have multiple stories in development, but development all happens in my head. I don't start writing--even an outline--until I've figured out all the elements. For instance, for one story I have the general plot, protagonists, and even the antagonist. However, I haven't started outlining yet because I'm still trying to figure out the antagonist's motivation. Until I understand that piece, I don't feel like I'm ready to sit at the keyboard. So in my case, my stories tend to stay distinct; I don't write down ideas or partial stories. I start writing when I feel like I have the elements in place to do an outline. If I feel confident enough in the story to write an outline, then I know it's a story I can finish.

JoeBobMack ๐Ÿšซ

@whisperclaw

I have multiple stories in development, but development all happens in my head. I don't start writing--even an outline--until I've figured out all the elements.

Your memory/mind and mine work VERY differently! I'd be SO confused and forget SO much. Plus, I often work out aspects of character, motivations, and plot by writing about them (not writing scenes, just describing). It's great that we are all so different!

StarFleet Carl ๐Ÿšซ

@whisperclaw

I have multiple stories in development, but development all happens in my head. I don't start writing--even an outline--until I've figured out all the elements.

I have more than a dozen story ideas in notes. Otherwise, they'd get confused with all the other stories I think of at random. Plus, I only concentrate on one story at a time. When I start writing one, it's the only one I'm working on.

Darian Wolfe ๐Ÿšซ

@Ernest Bywater

Generally, I'll have an idea. If the idea interests me I'll play with it a bit and a few scenes will develop from it. I haven't written anything yet. It's still all in my head.

If I like the idea and scenes, but don't feel like pursuing it at the moment it goes onto a list as a tentative name and brief description. It stays on the list until I do become interested enough to write it.

If I like the new idea enough to write it I arrange the scenes I do have in chronological order. These scenes are considered set in stone. I then do research and play 2000 questions as I begin weaving a narrative between the scenes to connect them.

I rarely substantially change the set in stone scenes, The scenes in between them shift and mutate depending on both what I think will work and what the characters will agree to. Once I feel I've told the story I find a good stopping spot I'm done.

Ernest Bywater ๐Ÿšซ

@Darian Wolfe

Sound like we do much the same thing, except I write them down as soon as I can instead of trying to remember them.

Paladin_HGWT ๐Ÿšซ

@Darian Wolfe

Similar to Darian Wolfe and Ernest Bywater:

Sound like we do much the same thing, except I write them down as soon as I can instead of trying to remember them.

I write down some notes, and an outline of the story. I then start putting together a timeline, developing characters and other framework. Then I begin writing the story.

I keep the outline and timeline as guides, however, I often make significant changes as I go along.

I save different versions as I go along. Sometimes I think I have gotten off track, and revert to an earlier version. Or, as I go along, I may add in or modify something I dropped, that now fits in elsewhere.

I have a primary story that I focus on.

However, if I am having a "writer's block" on one story, I might switch over to a back burner story. A published author I admire, advised me, "Writers WRITE." Even if it's just notes on a future project, or a grocery list. Try to maintain the Habit of Writing."

Some of my "back burner" stories are closer to completion. Albeit, much shorter stories. They still need editing.

As soon as I finish the first "book" of Aztlan Portal, I may have some short stories I can upload. For now, I am focusing on my primary story.

Mushroom ๐Ÿšซ

@Ernest Bywater

I'm a great believer in the 'finish the story and edit it before you publish it' crowd. That means I usually have a number of partly written stories I'm working on at times.

With me, it depends on the story.

My longer form ones I often write over a year or more, and use feedback to adjust how the story may go. If I get positive feedback on a character, I may involve them more. Or the reverse if they are not liked.

But my shorter stories I write then post it all together.

Replies:   Ernest Bywater
Ernest Bywater ๐Ÿšซ

@Mushroom

My longer form ones I often write over a year or more, and use feedback to adjust how the story may go.

I write what I want to write, not what I'm encouraged to write by others. However, by finishing the story first I don't have to worry about writing myself into a corner then leaving it unfinished, the way some authors do.

Grey Wolf ๐Ÿšซ

@Ernest Bywater

My process was to write my first book entirely, edit it, then post it. It turned out that my editing needed more editing, so it was less 'done' when I started posting it than I thought it was, but it was done enough that, had other editors not joined the project (and improved it), it would've been in good shape.

I needed to do that to prove to myself that I could finish the damn thing and not leave readers hanging.

Since then, however, it's been write on deadline ahead of publication. Whether that 'sticks' or not, I'm not sure. I'd rather not stop publishing unless I find that my writing process has become broken and quality is suffering.

I have the luxury of writing a long-form story that, by its nature, allows for an extremely wide variety of outcomes. I'm unlikely to write myself into a corner and have to leave it unfinished. If it needed to reach a conclusion in a certain number of pages, my process would have to be different.

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