Here’s what I learned. The
process can work with one person. When I’m planning a new novel, I often use
walking time to brainstorm. I carry a pad of paper and a pen and jot down ideas
as they come to me. Like with brainstorming in a group, no idea is a bad one.
Just get it down. Then I can go over these later to pick the ones I will
incorporate into my novel.
Thursday, August 28, 2014
Brainstorming in the Writng Process
When I was in the corporate
world, I participated in a number of brainstorming session. When I started
writing, an author suggested brainstorming ideas for novels. I had never
brainstormed by myself and wondered about that advice. Then I gave it a try.
Thursday, August 21, 2014
Police Role Playing
I had a chance again this week
to be a role player for police training. Four new police officers were in
training, two with previous law enforcement experience and two brand new to the
police world.
My scenario was to be a person
who had been fired from my job, not allowed to take my personal belongings and
had come back in to break into my old locked office to reclaim my personal
stuff.
As a mystery writer I then embellished
the basic scenario by adding that my employer had been stealing things from my
desk and I had returned to retrieve a thousand dollar engagement ring that was
in my desk and that I needed to give to my fiancée.
Needless to say, I got cuffed and arrested all four
times. Sigh. One more taint to my law abiding reputation.
Thursday, August 14, 2014
The Editing Process
Okay. Now the rough draft is
done. On to editing. Some writers rewrite as the go, but I prefer to get a fast
rough draft completed and then go through numerous editing passes.
Editing pass number one: I read
through the whole draft to get a feel for what I’ve written, correcting any
content errors along the way.
Editing pass number two: Now I
really focus on readability. How can I write things more clearly.
Editing pass number three: On
to punctuation, grammar and word choices.
Editing pass number four+: I go
through and search on certain words I use too much such as “about” and change
or eliminate.
My final editing pass is to
read the manuscript out loud. Now I catch things that my eyes have skipped over
before.
Then the manuscript goes to my
wife, my first reader. After she give me comments, I make another editing pass.
Next, on to my critique group.
Once all those comments have been incorporated, I make another full editing
pass. Now I’m ready to submit it to the publisher.
Thursday, August 7, 2014
Research Trips
One of the things I enjoy about
writing is taking research trips. These have included an Alaskan cruise (the
setting the fourth book in my Paul Jacobson Geezer-lit Mystery Series, Cruising
in Your Eighties Is Murder) and visits to Venice Beach, California, (location
of Senior Moments Are Murder).
We just returned from a two
night stay in Glenwood Springs, Colorado. I have a manuscript that takes place
there, and it addition to a nice vacation at the hot springs, I wanted to
check on several of the scenes I had written. Good thing. I discovered a major
error. I had an important scene where my protagonist goes down to the Colorado
River. The problem: the place I used didn’t work because of a small impediment:
I-70 runs along the river with no way over or under the freeway at that point.
By walking around, I found a pedestrian bridge that crossed the freeway and
ended up in a lovely park, Two Rivers Park. With some minor editing, I can now
set it right.
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