By Janice Hardy, @Janice_Hardy
Don’t try to write the whole scene at once.
Last week, I was having a bit of trouble writing a scene for a new book. I’d been away from writing in general, and this book in particular for a while, so I was no longer in the writing flow. I had my outline summary, I knew what the scene entailed, I just couldn’t start it. So I did what I always do when a scene doesn’t want to start.
I took my summary and turned it into the individual moments that made up the scene.
This is as easy as just hitting a hard return after a line, and turning my summary into something closer to bullet points. That let me focus on smaller moments in the scene, and not the entire thing. I didn’t have to worry about the end, because I was working on the little bit at the start.
Scenes are easier to write when you break them down into bite-sized pieces.
Continue ReadingWritten by Janice Hardy. Fiction-University.com
Published on September 05, 2022 05:00