So I’ve been living in picture book world for a few years, now.
And while I’m still busy analyzing and perfecting my craft in that arena,
(Mini craft lecture: Great picture books are as compressed as poetry, containing a world in about 500 words or fewer, leave 50% of the story to the illustrator, are paced strategically through language and page turns, evoke emotion through image, active voice, and characterization, and end in way that’s surprising yet inevitable. Easy, right?)
I could no longer ignore that tiny voice in the back of my head that wasn’t a picture book character, but a character from a YA/new adult novel.
She’s been bugging me for years. And now that her whispers have turned to curses, I’ve decided to listen. Five years ago, I tried NaNo as a pantser. I failed. Miserably.
This year, with a little encouragement from another blogger and writing coach, Kate Johnston, I decided to take the plunge again.
Only this time with a little planning. I know who my characters are, but five years ago I just let them run wild. So that’s what they did. They rambled. They wandered. Aimlessly. They got lost.
I got lost, then I wadded up my Scrivener file and tossed it in the trash. Failure.
This year, I’m going to start with a plan. A structure. A beginning, a middle, and an end. How I get there during November will look more like pantsing, but when I’m finished, that pantsing will be contained within October’s plan. Call it plantsing.
We’ll see how it goes. Wish me luck!
And I’ve gotta tell you, I’m afraid of failing. Gulp. But it’s like that with all challenges, right?
If you, too, would like to take this on, give Kate’s website a look. I think you may find a tool or two to help you out.
Happy pantsing, planning, or plantsing! Cheers!
And I’d also like to give Kate Johnston a plug for giving me the tools to get the essential elements planned before the onset of NaNoWriMo. Five years ago I’d failed terribly when I just tried to pants it. This time I used what I call “plantsing,” a planning structure that still leaves room for pantsing during the heat of creation. You can find her at https://katejohnstonauthor.com/
Oh, yeah, go for it! I have yet to hear from a writer who didn’t enjoy NanNoWriMo, not to mention that I am a huge fan of your Bobbie character, so it’s about time you told her full story.
The clock’s ticking! Hope to have something for you to critique down the road. xo
Now I finally know what all those letters in the acronym (NanNoWriMo) mean. Thx, Jil! Sending good thoughts your way this coming month. Fingers crossed.
Thanks, Wes. Here’s to hoping that the Dogpatch will have something of my adult work to critique in the coming year.