Today on the Go Teen Writers Book Club, we’re discussing Chapter Eight: Emergence.
Chapter Recap:
Mr. James started this
chapter talking about how most authors consider themselves more of an outliner
or an organic writer, and that both writing styles have strengths and
weaknesses. I particularly liked this quote: “Outliners tend to have
cause-effect problems because they know where they need to go but don’t know
how to get there. Organic writers tend to have directionality problems because
they don’t necessarily know where they’re going.”
The subtitle of this chapter is “The Three Questions That Will Solve Every ‘Plot Problem’ You’ll Ever Have,” which I found quite compelling. The questions are as follows:
1. What would this character naturally do in this situation? Asking yourself this question will improve the believability of your story.
2. How can I make things worse? Asking this question will keep your story escalating toward an unforgettable climax.
3. How can I end this in a way that’s unexpected and inevitable? Asking this question will help you keep the surprises coming as you build your story toward a satisfying conclusion.
Mr. James says that outliners need to keep in mind that everything that you plan to have happen needs to have a reason to happen. That reason for happening needs to come from previous story events. Also, sometimes, what you feel needs to happen in your outline is not always what would naturally happen in your story.
But I think that seat-of-the-pants writers need to remember this too. I’m a hybrid writer. So I outline a skeleton of a story, and then I organically write each chapter. And too often some of my organic writing is something I “feel” needs to happen, yet it’s a boring, talking heads-type scene that eventually needs to be cut. So those italicized phrases above, in my opinion, apply to all kinds of writers, not only outliners. We all need to be aware of those connections and potential pitfalls.
Mr. James also points out that too often we ask ourselves as writers, “What would I do in this situation?” rather than, “What would my character do in this situation.” It’s important to remember that your character isn’t you. Let your character grow and move the story in ways that only he or she can.
Getting to know your characters takes time. You need to spend a lot of time getting to know the characters you have created. The better you know them, the more you’ll know what they want, what they’re afraid of, and how they’d respond in every circumstance.
Mr. James ended this chapter with a Q & A session with himself, which was interesting. He is fairly adamant about his own organic (seat-of-the-pants) writing style as being the best for everyone, and I don’t agree with that. Each of us needs to discover how we can best tell a story, and that won’t ever be the same for all of us because we are different people with different strengths and weaknesses.
What Stood Out:
I really liked this quote: “Continually ask yourself, ‘What are my readers wondering about, worrying about, hoping for, or expecting at this moment in the story?’ Then give it to them,” or give them something better. “Try to watch the story unfold through the eyes of your readers.” You don’t want your reader putting the book down. Work hard to see that they can’t. “Developing the ability to see things from a reader’s point of view is one of the most important things you can do as a storyteller.”
I’ve found this to be very true. If you are writing your story and you know it’s predictable, then you have a problem, and you need to find some ways to do something unexpected. If you know your readers are “shipping” two characters, yet you have no intention of getting them together, then you might need to change the writing enough to either get those characters together or make sure your readers aren’t quite so set on that couple getting together. As writers, we are setting out to tell a compelling, exciting story, not to annoy and disappoint our readers. It’s important to keep that in mind.
Tip of the week:
“Outliners need to
ask, ‘What is actually going on here? What are readers thinking at this point?
What do they want?’ Organic writers need to ask, ‘Is this scene essential to
the story? Have I spent too many or too few words on it considering its overall
importance to the narrative?’ The more time you spend asking questions of your
narrative and listening to your story, the more it will tell itself to you.”
~Steven James
Go Teen Writers Archived Articles to Help You Go Deeper:
Creating Compelling Characters: Backstory, Goals, and Motivations (From a hybrid)
How To Craft High Impact Scenes for Your Stories (From a plotter)
2 Ways To Be Sure Your Scene Really Matters (From a plotter)
Drafting a Book One Scene at a Time (From a pantser)
Questions:
Answer at least one of the following (or as many as you’d like).
• How do you get to know your characters?
• Are you an outliner or a seat-of-the-pantser or a hybrid of the two?
• What tips do you have for surprising your reader?
• Any questions?
I am completely a outliner. I never write organically; I just can’t. The outline changes as I write, but I couldn’t write without a detailed outline.
The more I read these posts, the more I realize I really should plan a little more. I generally don’t have any idea what’s going to happen, who is going to become a character, who/what the antagonist is, etc. So to-do list: Plan a little more. That way I don’t “write myself into a hole,” as I call it.
My tip for understanding your reader: Find a friend who is NOT a writer and have them read your story as you write. (write a chapter –> send it to them.) I have done this with my WIP and it’s really shown me what people want and are expecting. I’ll get emails from her saying things like, “Oh! What if you were to have Laylee die in the end? It would be such a beautiful sacrifice! It just makes sense! Oh, and by the way, Wynter and Kayden need to get together, so maybe you should make them older.” I’m seeing in her emails exactly what kind of things a reader is probably thinking about and looking for. It doesn’t mean I do what she says, but it does mean I keep it in mind and MAYBE, after making seem like it will never happen, I’ll give her what she wanted.
That makes a lot of sense! I should really find some friends who aren’t readers and let them read my story.
I like that idea. So far my story is in a disastrous draft stage, and I’m really uncomfortable showing it to people, but when I do get to a point where I want feedback, I’m going to make it a priority to send it to my non-writer friends. I always knew I would show it to my writer friends to get input on technical stuff, but this really helps me realize how important it is to get in the mind of my readers.
I’m sort of a hybrid plotter and pantser, but I think I rely too much on what needs to happen rather than what would naturally happen. I try to force my characters to act in certain ways and say/do certain things just to move the story in the direction I want it to go. My goal is to stop doing that and just let my characters be, get to know them as people, and try to see where they end up taking the story.
The funny thing is, right now, my favorite character is kind of this one guy that wasn’t really supposed to be that important. He was my main character’s older younger brother, and he was just supposed to be THERE in the story without really doing much. I always figured he would probably be suspicious of his siblings secretive behavior, but I always thought that that suspicion would be conveyed through my other characters’ observations of him. My story is written in the third person, and one day I was two paragraphs into a scene when I realized that it kind of sounded like my third person narrator was in his head. I thought it would be cool to start giving him the stage every now and then. Since then I’ve written several scenes from his perspective when originally I didn’t plan on writing any, and I made him find out what was going on a lot sooner than I ever intended. So I guess I like this character because I surprised myself with him. He allowed me to experience something I’ve heard so many authors say has happened to them: he ran away with my pen and wrote himself a life of his own. (Which is funny because he is so not a rebellious or overly outgoing character.) I liked having that happen. It strengthens my connection to my story, and I hope it can happen for me more in the future.
That’s so cool! I love that phrase too 😀 (he ran away with my pen and wrote himself a life of his own.)
I can totally relate! Characters running away with my pen has become something I’ve begun to expect. I may try to argue them back into place, but that is generally more of a token protest than anything else! ?