He has it all figured out - it took me years. |
Thirty years ago my first piece was published in Jackie
magazine about superstitions. I've learnt so many lessons along the way.
Some of them took me too long to learn and have cost
me.
There's a lot to recommend old fashioned pen and paper |
1. Never edit on screen.
You miss too much and sometimes your mind sees what it wants to see and not what's really there.
There's nothing more time consuming than forgetting what you put in each chapter and spending hours searching through your work to check something was or wasn't included.
Print out your work and edit with
pencil or in red pen and then edit onscreen. I don't know why, maybe it’s the
rhyme of pen or pencil on paper that concentrates the brain.
2. If you don't read books you
can't write books.
Reading
opens your eyes not just to how others write, but to the mistakes they make.
3. Read as widely as you can.
I write crime and devour books in that genre, but I love reading horror and anything supernatural too. At one stage, I read every Western I could get my hands on.
I write crime and devour books in that genre, but I love reading horror and anything supernatural too. At one stage, I read every Western I could get my hands on.
Read books you love. Read books you
hate. That way you can see what works and what doesn't.
4. Do chapter summaries or outlines
so you know what you've written in every single chapter with a quick glance.
Trust me, I've learnt this the hard
way.
Keeping track also helps with
continuity. You don't want people to shriek, "How can she have a fight
with her brother when he died of a drug overdose and it was mentioned in
chapter five!"
5. Save copies of your work every
single day. Use a free online storage company like Dropbox.
Does your Internet provider give
you access to online storage free? If so, use it.
Back up not just every single day
you do any work, but any time you make substantial or important changes. As
well as online storage companies, email yourself your work to every email you
have that either offers unlimited or a generous amount of storage.
And invest
in a an external drive. One large enough to store EVERY FILE on your computer.
That way if you're computer has a
nervous breakdown you won't have a melt down when you discover you've lost all
of your work.
6. You can put a bit of yourself
into one character or every character, but never make them you.
Make them react in their own way to things that happen to them, not you.
Make them react in their own way to things that happen to them, not you.
We give characters life, but its
theirs to live in their very own unique way.
What do you think of those tips?
Are there any tips that you swear by?
I'd love to hear from you.
Drop me a comment on this blog or
contact me on Twitter where I tweet as @jenthom72
I hope to tweet you:)