Writing a Better Draft (A Love Letter)
You probably know, because I’ve been whining about it incessantly, that I’m in the throes of completing the umpteenth rewrite of my current novel. I am determined to finish it this long Memorial Day weekend if it kills me. And it might. Kidding. Sort of.
Anyway, I had dinner with a couple of writing friends this week and we talked about how to write a better draft. As in, getting more of your vision for the book on the page in the first place so that you don’t have to go through the torture of rewriting it so many times.
I want to learn how to write a better first draft. I am good at writing fast and I’m a big believer in it. But the last two novels I’ve written were both lightning bolt ideas I was so excited about that I just started writing. I wrote a loose outline and did some minor character work, but that was about it.
Yes, I am the self-same writer who has taught and preached the wisdom of prepping to write the novel. As in taking time to think plot and structure and arc and character and motivation through. Two examples of how this didn’t work so well for me: A. the above-mentioned torturous rewrite, and B. the novel I started writing on my month-long idyll in Ceret. I stalled out on that one after 30,000 words, without a clue where to go next. I got bored with my main character. And if I’m bored with her, my reader will be also.
I do know there is a thing that only happens in the actual writing—and that is that the writer begins to understand the story better as she puts it on the page. But that doesn’t mean there isn’t room for improvement beforehand. So here are the things I’m doing to get better at first drafts:
–I’m going to do tons and tons of prep work.
–I’m studying story structure. Again. It’s one of my favorite topics, and it is time to return for a refresher course.
–I’m actually taking a class! It’s full, or I’d link to it here, but it is designed to help you figure out your best route to writerly productivity based on brain science (for which I am a total wonk).
–I’m reading obsessively in my genre. I always do, but right now I’m stepping it up.
–And finally, I’m not being too hard on myself—and vowing to remember that sometimes you just have to let the magic come in the writing.
Do you have any tips for writing better first drafts? Leave a comment and tell me!
**You might want to come to France with me, right? You do, don’t you? Find out more here.