Ugly Duckling
That pretty much sums up my first draft.
And my second.
Then the thing starts to perk up.
Can you tell I'm deep in revision mode?
The story that was inside my mind has been drafted. It's been shuffled around. The fluff and stuffing I needed while transferring the story from my mind to the page has been purged. The missing pieces of character and plot have been found and put in the correct order.
At least this is where I should be at the end of second draft. As it turns out, this story hasn't followed any normal path to reach this point.
Due to circumstances entirely beyond my control - including the unplanned arrival of a high-energy puppy, a move, and two emergency surgeries on a family member - I needed two drafts to be where I should have been at the end of the first one because I lost focus so many times.
So I'm on Draft 3 now. Pulling out fluff and stuffing by the handful. Inserting bits of character and plot. Making sure the motivation and goals are clear. Building lots more tension on the page. Tightening as I go. The incident on page 85 now shows up well before page 50.
When I finish this draft, the real work will begin. Getting deeper into point of view will tweak the voice, which will tinker with things like dialogue and description. I'll need to find all those pesky overused words. Play with sentence structure and stronger words that still keep to the character's voice and overall tone. Pacing - where I need to jiggle with the ups and downs, the suspense and release.
After all that, I'll read it aloud to catch things I missed. I usually find a lot.
I still have an ugly duckling right now, but it won't be long before my vision starts taking shape. But one day, after lots of help from my critique partners and months of revision and editing, my ugly duckling will grow up and be refined enough to venture out.
It won't yet be a beautiful, graceful swan ... that's what good editors are for.
But it's on the way.
.
And my second.
Then the thing starts to perk up.
Can you tell I'm deep in revision mode?
The story that was inside my mind has been drafted. It's been shuffled around. The fluff and stuffing I needed while transferring the story from my mind to the page has been purged. The missing pieces of character and plot have been found and put in the correct order.
At least this is where I should be at the end of second draft. As it turns out, this story hasn't followed any normal path to reach this point.
Due to circumstances entirely beyond my control - including the unplanned arrival of a high-energy puppy, a move, and two emergency surgeries on a family member - I needed two drafts to be where I should have been at the end of the first one because I lost focus so many times.
So I'm on Draft 3 now. Pulling out fluff and stuffing by the handful. Inserting bits of character and plot. Making sure the motivation and goals are clear. Building lots more tension on the page. Tightening as I go. The incident on page 85 now shows up well before page 50.
When I finish this draft, the real work will begin. Getting deeper into point of view will tweak the voice, which will tinker with things like dialogue and description. I'll need to find all those pesky overused words. Play with sentence structure and stronger words that still keep to the character's voice and overall tone. Pacing - where I need to jiggle with the ups and downs, the suspense and release.
After all that, I'll read it aloud to catch things I missed. I usually find a lot.
I still have an ugly duckling right now, but it won't be long before my vision starts taking shape. But one day, after lots of help from my critique partners and months of revision and editing, my ugly duckling will grow up and be refined enough to venture out.
It won't yet be a beautiful, graceful swan ... that's what good editors are for.
But it's on the way.
.
Comments
Stephen Tremp
Terry
Terry's Place
Romance with a Twist--of Mystery
Stephen - Good editors are awesome.
Terry - I love how we all write in different ways. If I tried to tweak as I went, I'd be a train wreck.
Helen
VR - Viewpoint is everything :)
Elspeth - I sure hope so.
Conda - Yes, there's always more work to be done. I guess it's never finished until you see it in print or onscreen. Then you wish you'd changed this or that or the other.
And there's still time to participate in the blogfest, Carol. Several bloggers are posting tomorrow. Jump on in!
Happy revising!
Alex - That ad must be what prompted me to make this post. So far I've chosen from everyone else's list. I think I have Cheers, Seinfeld, MASH, Quantum Leap, X-Files, and there were others I can't recall at the moment. I'd add I Love Lucy.
Kerrie - I certainly hope fewer family emergencies. I'd like to think I'm done with those for a long time.
I'm glad you haven't abandoned your ugly duckling. Sometimes mama swans have lots of things to take care of and the only thing she can manage in the meantime is to protect her little duck.
You've protected it. Now, you're helping it to learn to spread it's wings. Soon, it will learn to swim....and, ultimately, to fly.
Hang in there!
And I'm sorry about the surgeries...I hope everything is alright!
Words Crafter - How beautiful. Thank you. Yes, everyone is fine know. Thankfully.
RaShelle - I'm persistent. Plus, I truly believe in this story.
I am doing 'second edit'-which is the part where I am not SUPPOSED to be editing (but can't help myself)--only taking notes on the big stuff that needs fixing...
Good luck to you!
T
Sheila - Go for it.
Teresa - I sure hope you're right.