When a Book Doesn’t Work
by Elizabeth S. Craig, @elizabethscraig
A little over a year ago, I started work on a new project. Three weeks later, I abandoned it.
It’s the first time since the 1990s that I’ve quit a project. The thing was, I was excited about the premise for the book. I carved out time, while writing another book and outlining a third, to work on it.
But I found it was getting increasingly difficult to work on the outline. I went to the library in order to focus solely on the book and made some good progress that way. Still, I was getting cold feet. And I don’t ever get cold feet with my books.
Since I had two other books to work on, I decided to put the manuscript aside for a while. The decision disappointed me, though. I already had a cover designed, back cover copy, characters, a developed setting, and the first chapter. Despite my disappointment, I dove with some relief into the other books I was writing. It was good to be surefooted and on familiar territory again.
Months went by, more books were written. I was still thinking about the abandoned project, knowing I needed to get back to it. But every time I steeled myself to return to the document, I remembered my dissatisfaction with the book and stopped, returning again to the familiarity of the established series I was working on.
I’m definitely a finisher though, and the project kept talking to me. I’d think about it before I went to sleep and when I woke up in the morning. I’d read other books and think about my own during quiet moments during the day.
I got ahead with my regular writing schedule, stuck a book up for pre-order, and then delved into the abandoned book.
I started by asking myself what was making me unhappy about the story. I narrowed it down to these things:
I’d decided it was a solo project instead of part of a series.
I’d decided it was not a cozy mystery, but something akin to women’s fiction.
I didn’t like the fact that I’d used first person POV.
I didn’t like the meager outline I’d developed for the project. Usually, my outlines run about 35 pages or more.
So I started all over again. I didn’t even open the old document, nor the previous, scanty outline. I changed all the things I disliked about the project and started over. The book came out in April.
So here’s my advice if you run across a similar issue:
Have you ever reached an impasse with a book? How did you approach it?
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