After The Idea - Website
After The Idea - Website
After The Idea - Website
A pyramid approach to
By Jess Lourey
Summarize your novel in one sentence. Begin the process by distilling your idea into its purest form.
Dont include specific names or places
now; the idea is to be purely conceptual.
Heres an example of a one-sentence
summary for H.G. Wells classic novel
The Time Machine: An English inventor
travels thousands of years into the future,
discovering the devolution of humanity
where he had hoped to find utopia.
Its tempting to pack lots of detail
into the one-sentence summary. Your
idea is complex, your characters multifaceted, your setting diverse. How can
you condense all of that to a handful of
words? I know the challenge. Here is my
first attempt at crafting a guiding onesentence summary for November Storm,
the novel Im now writing for my series:
Mira James, a new PI license and copy
of Private Investigation for Dummies in
hand, is asked to look into a suspicious
hunting accident in northern Minnesota
and instead uncovers a secret that threatens to topple the community. Meanwhile,
another dead body is thrown into her path,
and she is forced to juggle a budding relationship with blue-eyed Johnny Leeson
with an uncomfortable attraction to Gary
Wohnt, local police chief, while her kinetic
sidekick, Mrs. Berns, flies the coop, leaving
Mira to work it out on her own.
Turn
an idea into
a finished manuscript
using a basic 7-step approach
novel-writing
return, the Time Traveler tells them hes
visited the future. He discovered two
humanoid races remaining on the planet:
the beautiful and childlike Eloi, and the
subterranean, haunted Morlocks. He
explains his idyllic time eating fruit with
the Elois and exploring the area, followed
by his discovery that the Morlocks raise
and harvest the Eloi like cattle. He ends by
describing his escape from the time
period, including his burning of the forest,
the wresting of his time machine from the
Morlocks, and the loss of Weena, his Eloi
friend. Distraught, he travels further into
the future where he witnesses the death of
humanity and the planet. Finally, he
returns to the time period he left, providing an exotic flower from Weena as proof
of his travels.
For example, is the character lazy because her mother always picked up after
workout
ANTAGONISTS ARE typically underwritten characters. Who wants to
spend time with the bad guy? I do, because a well-written, believable and sympathetic antagonist spells the difference between a toss-away novel and a cinematic
novel. Imagine you are your antagonists biographer. Interview him or her, creating a character page from the answers (re Step 3). Questions to ask:
Whats your name? Nickname?
Anyone ever tell you that you look like someone famous?
Of all your qualities, which are you most proud of? Where do you think you
acquired this quality?
What do people seem to like the least about you? How does it make you feel?
Which habit of yours would you most like to change?
If someone looked in your bathroom garbage right now, what would they find?
What scent do you enjoy the most, and what does it remind you of?
If you could go back in time and change one day of your life, what day would
it be, and why?
What three goals do you want to accomplish in the next year? What challenges
do you have to overcome to reach them?
Whom do you love most in this world and why?
What scares you?
If you can coax your antagonist into answering these questions, youll be well
on your way to creating a character readers can relate to who is nonetheless a
damaged human being. This will create an incredibly interesting conflict when he
or she crosses paths with your protagonist.
J.L.
T h e py r am i d
app r o ac h
Write novel
Outline novel
General story line. Draft a threeto five-sentence summary of the characters story arc; this will be a characterspecific version of the novel summary
you wrote in Step 2.
Remember that you as the author
always need to know more about your
characters than your reader ever sees.
This inside information allows you to
create a multi-dimensional, internally
consistent population for your novel.
Beware that Step 3 is an easy place to get
sidetracked; keep your character outlines to one page per person so the process doesnt morph from novel writing
to scrapbooking.
r e s o u r ce s
On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft
by Stephen King