Saturday, October 5, 2013

NaNoPants

October is here, which for me means that NaNoWriMo is looming on the horizon. Over the past seven years, I've approached my effort in a variety of ways - from complete seat-of-the-pants to moderately well-outlined. Two years ago, I went in with nothing more than a title (The Milkshake of Destiny) and a half-baked notion as to what it might be about...all chosen as I sat down on November 1 to start writing.

What I've found from these disparate approaches is that the story tends to be better when I have it outlined. Seat of the pants yields some interesting results and lets the characters own their stories, but also leaves me occasionally struggling to define and stick with a plot. It's even tougher when I don't know how the story will end.

On the flip side, I don't like rigorous outlines. I know some authors are well-known for having excruciatingly detailed character biographies, political histories, and outlines down below the scene level. Once I start writing, my characters inevitably gain a life of their own, and trying to force them to stick to the script can make scenes feel forced...which is a major pet peeve of mine as a reader. So I've had better luck with character sketches and vague outlines that hit on key plot points and the general flow/structure of the story. Nothing is so firm that I can't adjust on the fly if and when the characters begin to take over.

So, after a couple years of largely "pantsing" it with a story picked at the last minute, this year I've decided to get back to the roughed outline approach (no-pantsing). In terms of settling on a story idea (90% certain) and beginning an outline (first pass done), I'm well ahead of the game for a change. Just putting my surgery recovery downtime to good use.