I think outlining
is hard.
I said it.
I need it, but it ties me up in knots.
I'm about 40,000 words into my WIP and I'm still taking off a few days every week or so to toy with the outline. A suggestion from my genius sister finally helped make this outline into something I can hold on to. She told me to put it in the voice of my main character, from her perspective. Then, she said, "If your character spits the line of text back in your face, you'll know if wasn't really something she would think, say, or do." This worked amazingly for me.
Want a peak at what I wrote tonight?
Tessa’s Story:
I said it.
I need it, but it ties me up in knots.
I'm about 40,000 words into my WIP and I'm still taking off a few days every week or so to toy with the outline. A suggestion from my genius sister finally helped make this outline into something I can hold on to. She told me to put it in the voice of my main character, from her perspective. Then, she said, "If your character spits the line of text back in your face, you'll know if wasn't really something she would think, say, or do." This worked amazingly for me.
Want a peak at what I wrote tonight?
Tessa’s Story:
I’m
sixteen and pregnant. My mother says not for long, but she’s crazy
if she thinks I’m getting an abortion just because when she was a
pregnant teenager she kept me—and always regretted it. One look at
the ultrasound and I know I can’t go through with it. There is a
tiny person waving a miniature hand at me, and I could be looking at
myself, all those years ago. Mom will be too busy drinking to notice
anyway.
I
make the mistake of telling my boyfriend, Johnny. He says there’s
no way the baby is his. Walks away from me while I crumple into a
ball behind Burger Boy. Then the idiot tells the whole school on
Facebook. So, now all my friends think his lies are truth—that I’m
pregnant because I cheated on him. Then my best friend Brielle’s
mom tells my mom everything and she blows up—kicks me out with
nowhere to go. If it weren’t for my former dance teacher Julie
taking me in to live with her, I’d be sleeping in a women’s
shelter, headed for foster care. This world is seriously screwed up,
because Julie has never been able to have children, while I’m
apparently too stupid to keep from getting pregnant.
I’ve
lost most of my friends to Team Johnny. I’ve had to give up dance
and cheer. And with my body stretching and swelling to the
approximate proportions of a whale, it’s lucky for me I have Evan,
my coworker at Burger Boy. He’s the only person who doesn’t look
at my belly first, these days; seems to really see me.
Then
stupid Brielle and Johnny start dating, which turns my ginormous
stomach. And when Julie miscarries after her last try at in vitro, I
worry just a little bit that adopting my baby is the only reason
she’s letting me stay. I go home to see if moving back in with Mom
is an option now that she’s cooled off, but apparently her
cooling-off process involved moving without leaving me so much as a
forwarding address.
Beer.
Beer suddenly seems like a good idea, so I have a couple of drinks at
the party where Evan’s band is playing. Stupid? Whatever. I just
don’t want to think anymore. Good thing I have Evan and Julie to do
my thinking for me. Acting all disappointed in me, Evan drags me home
to Julie, who decides to get all parental all of a sudden. I can stay
with her until the end of the pregnancy, but only if I do nothing
illegal, immoral, or harmful to myself—or more importantly, the
baby. By the time the buzz has worn off, I can see that they’re
right—not like I’ll admit that to them.
The
next day I go to my twenty-week ultrasound. And I see that baby. That
perfect little tiny person. It’s a girl. I’m going to have a
girl. I will name her something awesome. A strong name for a strong
girl who will never be dumb enough to have sex without protection
just because her boyfriend tells her it will feel better. Samantha.
Looking at her, I realize something amazing. I don’t have to wait
to find a guy who will love me for me, or hold out the crazy hope
that someday I’ll have a mother who’s not too busy being broken
to love me. I have the baby. She’s beautiful. She’s perfect. And
she’s mine. She will love me the most, put me first, and be all the
family I’ll ever need.
The
twenty remaining weeks of my pregnancy are plenty of time to figure
out how all this is going to work, aren't they?
Mwahahahaha...
Of course that's all you get, right now. Just up to the midpoint—when
Tessa's reaction turns to action. The moment where she thinks she
knows everything she needs and starts to plan to get it. If you want
more you have to read the book.
Well...
I have to write the book and then my agent has to love it and pitch
it and sell it and someone has to publish it. And then you have to
read it... please.
Now
that I'm happy with my outline, I've got to get my nose back to the
grindstone and keep cranking out prose for my self-imposed deadline
in May.
But
first I have to sleep. As for the book, like Scarlett O'Hara, "I'll
think about that tomorrow."
Mwahahahaha indeed! You've inspired me. I need to do a chapter by chapter outline.
ReplyDeleteYay, Amy. I'm not that far along, yet, and I do find that too much outlining can really hinder my progression on a project. One great thing a writer friend just did was to highlight in red the conflict at the bottom of each chapter synopsis, so she would always know there was one. And that each scene was really necessary and helpful to her manuscript.
ReplyDeleteI'm so glad Caryn linked to your blog via FB, because I'm very much enjoying reading through your posts. This story sounds wonderful, and yes, I'd love to read it one day! :)
ReplyDeleteThanks so much. I'm excited to get to know you better. I'm loving writing this book, and I can't wait to get to share it.
ReplyDelete