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234 pages, ebook
First published July 16, 2014
Winter is a great time for me to work on my writing skills. The weather prevents outdoor activity (temps barely above freezing today) and the toasty wood fireplace is conducive to creativity. With that in mind, I loaded my Christmas present, a Kindle Fire 6, with several writing craft books - my focus as always on plotting.
The first book I opened was Randy Ingermanson’s How to Write a Novel Using the Snowflake Method. I was hooked from line one:
Goldilocks had always wanted to write a novel.My inner girl-child squealed in delight. I taught myself to read chapter stories at the age of eight by devouring an encyclopedia of fairytales. Mr. Ingermanson is a genius! He wove the Snowflake Method into a modern day fairy story involving my childhood favorite characters. The Three Bears, Big Bad Wolf, Little Pig, Robin Hood, Old Mother Hubbard - they were all there. I didn’t stop reading long enough to pull out my notebook even though in my head the voice of my grown-woman self kept yelling, “Write this down! It’s important!”
I ignored all internal and external interruptions to follow Goldilocks as she learned to make a story out of the visions in her mind. I cheered as the lessons Baby Bear taught her like characters, good and villainous, need depth, also made sense to me. And as a bonus... While Goldilocks was attending this writers conference, there was a murder! A fairytale wrapped in a murder mystery - could this crime suspense writer be happier? It was the best hours I’ve ever spent reading a writing craft book.
Yesterday I got out my notebook and went through Chapter 19: Summary of the Snowflake Method. I filled several pages then opened Scrivener to start work on a template that will help me use each step concisely. The only step I am modifying from Randy Ingermanson’s method is Step 8: Write a List of All Scenes. He recommends using a spreadsheet but I am determined that, after owning it for three years, I will master the Scrivener software in 2015. I will be using the corkboard and scene note cards in the place of spreadsheet columns and rows.
As if the delightful format of How to Write a Novel Using the Snowflake Method was not enough, Mr. Ingermanson included Chapter 20: The Snowflake for This Book. He used his method to show exactly how it works with the story he wrote for teaching it. I can say unequivocally that I have never read a better craft book. Did I mention that this is Advanced Fiction Writing Book 1? I can’t wait for AFW Book 2!
“It’s obvious to Elise, but not necessarily to everybody,” said Baby Bear. “That’s the problem with Values—they aren’t always obvious. An old woman might prefer a bald, fat man her own age who is great at conversation, rather than a young, handsome, narcissistic man who only talks to beautiful young women.”
“Very well, I’ll fix that Value so it’s clearer,” Goldilocks said grumpily.
“And furthermore, Elise apparently believes that collaborating with the Nazis is evil.”
“Well, of course, that’s, um …” Goldilocks sighed.
“Obvious?” said Baby Bear. “And yet millions of people collaborated with the Nazis. Apparently, resisting Nazis wasn’t a Value for everybody.”