Do You Write Without A Net?

Man on Wire

There are many popular writers out there, John Irving among them, who never begin a project without knowing exactly where they’re going. I remember an interview with Irving where he said he starts a book by figuring out what its last sentence will be. There is something to be said for having a map, a guide book of sorts to keep you on track, to allow you to chart your progress.

Conversely, there are just as many well-known writers, Stephen King among them, who start with just a germ of an idea, a character or two, and then delight in discovering their story in the moment as they’re actually writing it. They feel that an outline only serves to stifle the creative process; in their view, to plot a story is to suffocate it.

Here’s where I stand on the issue: I spent many years authoring screenplays which began life as  structured, organized outlines, and so when it came to writing my first novel I was determined to work without a net. I knew only the bare essentials before plunging in: the story would involve repressed memories, and my teenage main character would somehow become his parents’ therapist.  The process was extremely liberating; in fact, maybe too liberating, in that it resulted in a huge first draft. But I don’t regret my choice and believe the story would not have as much of the energy and surprise that it does if I had plotted it out beforehand.

Things are a bit different with my new project, a YA horror novel. I’ve decided to go a bit further with plotting, to know more about the story and characters before I set off to write. I’m not sure if it’s because this is a “genre” project and I’m concerned about hitting on certain “genre” beats or expectations, but it just feels like the right move for this story. However, I haven’t completely abandoned my intrepid spirit, as my plot structure is pretty loose and I’ve purposely left open the answers to several questions that I’ll dig up when I start writing. There needs to be an element of mystery, a willingness to embrace the unexpected, or the writing will go stale. I can only write about my characters and the story for so long before I get the itch to finally bring them both to life.

So how about you? If you’re a writer reading this, where do you fall on the issue of story preparation? Outline or no outline? Net, or nothing but the unforgiving ground to catch you if you fall?

3 thoughts on “Do You Write Without A Net?

  1. Scott Ritchie

    Ahhh, good man, I wrote my first screenplay in 1989 and at that time I had the aide of a few lined yellow tablets on which I scrawled notes, plot points, snatches of dialogue, etc. I found certain concepts and set pieces that had sprung organically into the mix served as placeholders, beacons in the darkness of creation. In the years that have passed, I have attempted several screenplays without any deliberate direction and they have always gone astray. Always. Now, I plot more than ever before, from character bios to constantly evolving beat outlines. I usually have seven or more separate word docs open devoted to themes, fantasy scenes, fantasy dialogue, location facts, genre conventions, transitions, emotional arcs and suspense/action sequences. Each of these evolves and is revised continually throughout the process. I also work with folders that hold images culled from net searches. The images capture feelings and evocations that I’m trying to put into words or are locations or lighting schemes I think apply to the piece I’m writing. Now, whether through practice or this evolution of exploration, my writing is more focused and more muscular. But I am also very strict in the construction of the narrative, in that I will purposely stop myself from imagining the closure of every scene or arc. This way there remain surprises and even some emotions that I discover in the final execution of the scene. Speaking of which, I’ve tarried here long enough. Happy hunting!

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    1. Bryan Hilson Post author

      Thanks, Scott, I don’t think I ever knew just how expansive your process is. Thanks for sharing this. You’ve told me recently that you’ve achieved new heights in your own writing and that’s obviously a testament to your willingness to try new things enroute to finding a story-building technique that really works for you.

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  2. Scott Ritchie

    Yessir. Also, I must add that I now often open new documents to serve as a “branching” of the beat outline so that I can extrapolate the ramifications of differing narrative choices. What if my hero accidentally kills someone here? What would it mean down the line if the setting for this scene was a firing range instead of a parcheesi tournament? What if the thing they’re after here is not a medallion, but the brand on the hide of a living rhinoceros? This way I can follow the possibilities until they no longer inspire me or they are incorporated into the final story. I find the more malleable I consider the form, the more malleable it becomes and somehow more cohesive. I think I’ve long said to you that truly successful stories seem to be just as aware of what they are not, as what they are. That’s why there isn’t a dance number on the Death Star. 🙂

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