Review Group discussion
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I use Scrivener and really like it. I use the corkboard feature a lot and separate chapters by file - it allows me to lay them out side-by-side & move sections from one to the other, etc. Eventually you will export it to a single file for final editing, but it's good for the original set-up and construction.
Has anyone else used Scrivener? Have you any tips for the initial learning process for Mona?

Being in a critique group is a huge help even if you don't agree with what "they" say about your book. If six people can't figure out where your characters are standing, that's your problem. If one person can't figure it out, that might be their problem.




I faced that with my last novel, and as time was tight I thought I'd use what I had to at least write the last chapter. I was certain about that chapter and wrote it in just a few hours. Then I realised that to get there, I knew what must have happened in the previous chapter... and the one before that... and I kept going, backwards, until I met the middle.
I must admit, though, I was worried I'd end up writing in a parallel universe, never meeting the existing half way point, and have to write my way all the way to a different beginning. It worked out OK in the end. In fact, I realised why I had got stuck. I saw where I needed 2 extra chapters and where I needed to modify earlier sections of the book.
It's certainly a technique I'll remember, and more than likely use again at some point.

Okay, /derail.
I'm betting I'm not alone in coming across neat tricks of the trade by accident, and for the rest relying on good friends who have been there before me to save a lot of the grunt work of what is a huge learning process.
If you have any tips, advice or funny stories about where it went wrong, how about sharing them with us all?