Making Progress

Rough drafts are just what the name implies: rough. That's a good thing with this third book in the Hazel Whitmore series.
First Problem: Hazel gets her chicks. So? This must feed into the story line somewhere. Where?
Second Problem: Hazel learns to shoot. So? I may have an inkling where this feeds into the story. Maybe.
Third Problem: I keep getting the impression my timing is screwy. Maybe I should get that calendar out, at least for the rewrite.
Fourth Problem: The other two books in the series ran around 50,000 words. This one is much shorter. Maybe fixing all the problems will fix this one too. I hope.
Plot holes abound.
The plot does continue to unfold. My main antagonist turns out to not be the antagonist, only the red herring. So now I have to be sure the real antagonist doesn't become a deus ex machina.
Problems abound. But this is the rough draft. Rough drafts are written to be fixed, smoothed and polished.
It's nice when they aren't quite so rough.
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Published on April 22, 2014 14:24
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message 1: by P.J. (new)

P.J. O'Brien I've always had problems with my characters turning out to be more than I thought when I first typed them into life. Antagonists end up with human sides and protagonists have their shadows and foibles. It's what makes writing such an adventure, I suppose.


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