5/16/2019 Day 16 - Setting as a CharacterHow Setting Can Be A Character Most novels have several different settings within them. Each setting will have its own characteristics, from a bustling, noisy café, to a sleepy quiet waiting room, to a dark forbidding forest. Those characteristics can cause our characters to act or react in very specific ways that have to do with their hopes, fears, and aspirations. Consider for a moment, Black Beauty. One scene that comes to mind is at the track during a downpour. The rain is making the track slippery with mud. Our characters have to make a choice about racing Black Beauty in the rain or forfeiting. When they decide it will be worth it to test Black Beauty, they find out he's a mudder (a horse that runs very well under these weather conditions). Settings that have an effect on our characters should be developed as characters themselves, at least for the scenes in which they take place. They can be used as foils for increasing tension or providing relief as a breather after moments of high action. On the one hand, a walk in the forest can be scary if the forest is dark and foreboding, but it can also be a moment where a character regroups their thoughts or finds peace in the dappling sunlight as it comes through the gently rustling leaves. The setting characteristics outlining exercise from Day 4 was very similar to today's exercise, but here we will go one step deeper and focus on presenting our setting as a character. This exercise is about enhancing your settings by adding more detail in a very deliberate way. Therefore, you could start from the worksheet from Day 4, but consider creating a whole new worksheet in order to take that closer look. Exercise: Setting Characters worksheet
Setting Characteristic Parameters Setting - Write in the chapter number and scene number o the scene. I like to use a shorthand notation of C1S1 which represents Chapter 1 Scene 1. Optionally, you can use a short description. Five Senses - Define the ways you have used each of the five senses to evoke the mood of the setting. Mood depends on how you want the character to react. If this is an action sequence, the mood should amp up the character's behavior, but if this is a breather, the mood should be restful. Action - The mood of the setting may be the "action" of the setting, but our environments can be more than mood. Take for instance, an earthquake. The mood of the setting might be carefree or the normal day-to-day apathy we all experience as we go about our daily routines, but the sense of the ground rolling beneath our feet and the low rumble complemented by the tinkling of glass from the vibrations of an earthquake would also be an "action" in our setting. Character Reaction - Describe the way the character(s) react(s) to the setting. Analysis of the Worksheet
DOWNLOAD: Setting Characters Worksheet Template Instructions Tips for working by hand If you'd like to work on notepaper or set up your own table in your favorite application, include the columns listed above for each table. The percentage listed is approximately the size you should make each column. Add rows as you work down through your chapters. Leave a little extra space between scenes as you work in case you want to add more details as you work further into your story. Return to the Table of Contents Go to Day 17 - Head Hopping 5/15/2019 Day 15 - Character ArcsWhat is a Character ArcA Character Arc is the inner journey that a character take from the beginning to the end of a period of time. In novels, the character arc for the main character generally covers the length of the story, but minor characters may also have character arcs and theirs may run for shorter periods of time. The inner journey reflects a change a character makes in terms of philosophy or viewpoint. Character arcs are tied closely to conflict and tension in a story because what a character wants will be interrupted by all the hurdles thrown at them to bring on conflict as they work to achieve their goal. Having a solid character arc requires the writer to get to the crux of what the character wants and needs. It often will be reflected in the flipping of a strength or weakness of the character by the end of the story, so a character trait presented early in the story as a weakness becomes the character's strength in the end. Wants and needs are two very different dimensions in a character. Wants are superficial. They sit on the surface and are based in some deception the characters have brought onto themselves. Needs are the deeper, more meaningful aspects that are often hidden, not only from the reader, but from the character as well. It's only as the character goes after what they want that they discover what they need. For example, let's look at a book whose central theme is bullying and where the main character is being bullied. What the character wants is for the bullies to stop bullying. What the character, needs, on the other hand, is a coping mechanism. The want is what sets the character on his path to finding a way to not be bullied. During that journey and after the climax, the character may discover he is smarter or stronger than the bullies, but what he needed all along was a way to cope with the bullying. The change that has come over the character by the end of the story is that he has learned how to deal with bullies. Types of Character Arcs Character arcs can be neutral, positive, or negative. Generally speaking, if you are writing a novel and find your main character's arc does not change your character for the better or the worse, you will risk frustrating and disappointing your readers. The point of reading a book for most people is to find out what happens when, and if the answer is "nothing" in the end, the reader is left with feeling the book was a waste of time. There are some exceptions, including non-fiction books and mysteries, but the goal should be to leave the reader satisfied with the result (positive arc), activated to make a change or do something different (negative arc), or learning something new (which is often the purpose of non-fiction works and mystery novels). If you are writing a mystery, you may want to focus on the secondary characters rather than the main character. The main character may have a neutral character arc, but the secondary characters are likely to have either a positive or negative character arc. A Positive Character Arc A positive character arc is one in which the character overcomes challenges and becomes a better person. They may be physically stronger, mentally smarter, or more emotionally empathetic. Stories with positive character arcs are fun stories. They are the Disney fairy tales, romance stories, and heroic journeys on the shelves. They show us that everyday people can achieve great things and give us hope or comfort that we too can do great things. A Negative Character Arc A negative character arc is one in which the challenges get the better of the character in a way that stunts the character's growth or development. In the end they are a worse person instead of a better one. Stories with negative character arcs act as warnings, either letting us know what we would be up against if we choose the main character's path and how things can go terribly wrong. Subplots and Secondary Characters Subplots generally are supporting the primary theme of a story or presenting additional related themes with a supporting characters journey as it coincides with the main character's. Therefore, if you are introducing subplots in your novel, be sure to consider the character arcs of your supporting characters as well. Exercise: Character Arcs
If you are creating your notes in your OneNote Novel Editing notebook, follow these steps to complete the exercise:
Chapter Summary Parameters You should complete this exercise by reviewing your Day 3 Character Attributes worksheet, thinking about your central themes, and skimming through your story as needed. Character - Write in the character's name or, if unnamed, a short description. Goal/Want - Write down a short description of what the character wants. Deception/Lie - Define the lie or misconception that the character believes about themselves or the world around them that prevents them from achieving their goal. Strengths - List the character's strengths as they relate to the goal. Weaknesses - List the character's weaknesses as they relate to the goal. Change - Explain how the character overcomes the deception that prevented them from going after their goal (positive character arc) or how the character comes to believe the lie and self-destructs (negative character arc). Character Arc Analysis Your character arc for each character should have all of the elements listed above in the parameters. If it doesn't, something is missing. You can ask yourself the follow questions to try to get to the crux of what is wrong:
DOWNLOAD: Character Attributes Worksheet Template Instructions Tips for working by hand If you'd like to work on notepaper or set up your own table in your favorite application, include the columns listed above for each table. The percentage listed is approximately the size you should make each column. Add rows as you work through your chapters. Leave a little extra space between characters so you have plenty of room to add notes about changes you might want to make. Return to the Table of Contents Go to Day 16 - Setting as a Character 5/14/2019 Day 14 - Build TensionBuild More Tension in Your Story While tension in a story can be tested by reviewing pace (see Overall Chapter Pacing), you can also make sure your story doesn't lag in the middle due to tension not ramping up. If action rises and falls along a flat plane rather than rising and falling with incremental increases, the center of the story can feel repetitious and as if nothing is really moving forward. The way to correct this is to make sure the tension is building with each conflict. For example, in a romance novel, tension may build between the main character as the love interest in the following ways:
In the example above, a "first fight" is often disregarded in a relationship, especially if it's a new relationship as a minor tiff or lover's quarrel indicative of nothing in the bigger scheme of love. When friends bring evidence to the table, though, doubts may be sewn in the main character's mind but then also rationalized as if the friends are jealous. But when the best friend gives hard evidence, the main character now has to make some decision that is going to bring the conflict to the cusp of the climax. Each conflict ramps up the discord in the main character's heart. For this exercise, you will need to think about all the ways you are causing discord between your main character and one of the following: their self, a secondary character(s), the antagonist, or the reader. You will be able to use your Chapter Summary for this exercise, but will also be creating another worksheet. For this worksheet, you will be moving to the Developmental Edit section of the notebook because we are starting to crystallize the story. Exercise: Create a Tension Worksheet
Analysis of your conflict After you have ranked all your scenes with conflict, you can ask yourself the following questions to see if you need to make repairs.
Methods you can consider for fixing or adding more tension
DOWNLOAD: Tension From Conflict Worksheet Template Instructions Tips for working by hand If you created the Conflict worksheet earlier, you can use highlighters to either highlight the items indicated in the instructions or eliminate them. (Do whichever offers the least amount of work and color on the page.) Add a rank column wherever you can squeeze it in. Maybe at the front of the columns you first created or the end. If you don't have much room, consider using a different colored pen or pencil for marking the rank. Return to the Table of Contents Go to Day 15 - Character Arcs Every Scene Should Count Every scene should drive your novel forward. If a scene doesn't, it should be removed or revised. Today's exercise will help you focus on each scene to ensure the scene has a purpose and that it moves your story forward. Said another way, each scene should have a mini-arc to be effective. The arc will be made up of an Action, a Reaction, and a New Action. An action, whether it is external or internal to your main character, will cause your character to react, and then a new action will carry the character (and your reader) forward. Let's think for a moment what kinds of actions make our characters react.
In each case above, the main character is going to need to react to the situation that has been placed before them, and after they react, they will need to formulate a new plan to move forward. Any scene which is missing one of these three parts is lacking its purpose within the story. Today's Task You could look back at your Chapter Summary (see Day 5) but I like to do this step independently of that analysis simply because, by this point, I know my story so well inside and out that I'm looking for any way that helps me see the scenes with fresh eyes. Also, this analysis may have more rows in the table than the Chapter Summary if your chapters are made up of more than one scene. You should do this exercise by using both your memory of what you wanted or thought you needed to accomplish in each scene plus a review to confirm you did what you set out to do. Exercise: Complete the Purposeful Scenes Worksheet
If you are creating your notes in your OneNote Novel Editing notebook, follow these steps to complete the exercise:
Setting Characteristic Parameters From memory, complete the information in the columns from SCENE to READER RESPONSE. Scene - Write in the chapter number and scene number o the scene. I like to use a shorthand notation of C1S1 which represents Chapter 1 Scene 1. Optionally, you can use a short description. Purpose - In the most concise possible way, note the purpose of the scene. The most common include:
Focal Character - Not every scene will necessarily focus around your character, so note in the Focal Character column who is the character being changed or challenged. (Think about a Darth Vader scene. He's the main character in the scene who's being challenged by the rebels.) It's important to know, a setting can also be a character, so if you have a setting that is going through a change, put the name of the setting here. (More about setting as a character is coming soon.) Element of Change - Write in what about the focal character is meant to change. The list here is a short list, but it should give you an idea of how you should be thinking about the element of change.
Reader Response - Think about how the change should affect the reader. What is the emotional or empathetic response you are hoping to evoke? Again, this is a short list only meant to set you thinking on the right path.
The last three columns should be completed by re-reading your scenes as a fact-finding mission as you did earlier with the outlining worksheets in Days 3 - 7. Don't do these from memory because the goal should be to make sure you haven't forgotten or accidentally missed anything while writing. Action - Write in the internal or external action that prompts the focal character in the scene to act. In the scene mentioned above with Darth Vader, it might be one of his lieutenants telling him the rebels are moving forward. Reaction - Write in the character's reaction to the action with which they have been presented. New Action - Note the new course of action that the character is taking. The action plus the reaction should lead the character down a new path or reinforce the previous path with new determination. Analysis of your Purposeful Scene worksheet As you work through your scenes, you may start to see weak spots that are easily fixed or you may get a sense that something is wrong but still be unsure what that something is exactly. The following questions can help you analyze what you filled in and provide some clues about repairing a scene without much purpose. In some cases, you may realize you don't need the scene after all.
DOWNLOAD: Purposeful Scene Worksheet Template Instructions Tips for working by hand If you'd like to work on notepaper or set up your own table in your favorite application, include the columns listed above for each table. It will work best if you set the page up in the landscape orientation. The percentage listed is approximately the size you should make each column. You may even want to set the table up across two sheets of paper to give yourself enough room for each column. Return to the Table of Contents Go to Day 12 - Overall Chapter Pacing Editing Strategies Don't start today's tasks until you have read through all your chapters and annotated everything on character, setting, and scene, and have mapped your story to a story arc. If you've done all the work of reading and painstaking note-taking, now you are ready to start the even harder task of editing. Unless you are one of those truly gifted authors, you probably have a long list of TO-DOs spread throughout your worksheets. You can tackle these items in any number of ways, but I recommend you start with fixing the biggest plot holes first. Your biggest plot holes may have to do with character development or they might be related to the timeline. Only you can figure that out, but if you such a big overwhelming list of things that need to be fixed that you are frozen with the fear of doing anything, let me give a few guidelines. 1. Make a back up your novel before you change anything. This means, make a duplicate record of your story and set it aside. Consider naming it by today's date OR better yet, with an addition to the title of the document like this: Original file name: Tomorrow Girl New copy file name: Tomorrow Girl - Big Picture Edits - 2019-05-09 2. Highlight the biggest plot holes that you can remember off the top of your head. Whether you are using a paper copy or an electronic version of your spreadsheet, grab a highlighter and choose a color. Use that highlighter on the top five issues regardless of which worksheet they are on. Big plot holes will be those gigantic inconsistencies either in how events occur on the story's timeline or in the way a character acts. They are items that break the story and may require you to be really creative in the way that you fix them. In some cases, they may require that you do a massive edit across multiple chapters or even rewrite a big chunk of your story. Fix the timeline items first if you have them, then move on to the character inconsistencies. 3. Pick one of the five biggest plot holes and tackle it. Before you actually start running a red line through all the text, grab another sheet of paper and write down five ways you could fix that one plot hole. If you are feeling overwhelmed by the complexity of the plot hole, try breaking it into smaller chunks. Finish these sentences. This part of the story isn't working because _____. If _____ happens, then _____ can't happen later in the story. This will help you pinpoint the first thing that needs to be corrected, because really, it could be a whole series of events that are coalescing to cause the plot hole. Try working backward if you need to. In order for the ____ scene to work, ____ must happen first. And in order for that to happen, ____ must occur. If you have a close friend or fellow writer in your community (whether in your city, via the phone, or online), consider talking through the issue and its possible solutions with them. Sometimes talking aloud will bring things to light that you haven't even considered yet and you may start to find that one solution from your list is better over another, even if it isn't the easiest one. 4. Go back to your highlighted item and cross it off the list. I like to use an alternating color of highlighter and draw my lines right through the first color. One done! Doesn't that feel good?! 5. Make another backup. If your first plot hole required extensive edits to multiple chapters, this might be a good time to create another version or backup of your book. I make backups every time I feel like I've done anything major to my story. For you, this may mean after this first set of edits. For someone else, it may mean after all of the Day 2 - 6 edits. Whatever you decide, think of it in terms of, what if I have a change of heart after sleeping on it? How easy will it be to revert back and consider an alternate plan of action? 6. Once you've fixed the biggest plot hole, get busy on the next biggest one. Continue using whatever strategies helped carry you through on fixing the first one. By the time you get to #5... Well, I'm not going to lie. The fifth one can be as tough as the first one, but because you have tried some different strategies for fixing the other four, coming to a solution might feel simpler. 7. Once you have the first five items fixed, highlight the next five and work on them one at a time as you did the others. Keep whittling away until the last things you have to fix are items like "the walls were painted blue in chapter 3 but they're green in chapter 7." 8. Celebrate! When you finish this big round of edits and have crossed off all the To-Do items on all of your worksheets, be sure to do something to reward yourself. Buy yourself a piece of your favorite pie or a new book from an indie author that you've been following. Have a glass of wine (even if it's the middle of the week!). Whatever is your equivalent of a pat on the back, go for it. Good job! You deserve it! DOWNLOAD: Editing Strategies Checklist Template Instructions Return to the Table of Contents Go to Day 11 - Perfect Every Scene with Purpose What is a Story Arc? A story arc is the traditional arc that builds the structure of a story. You may also find it called a story curve or simply, the story structure. While genres will vary to some degree or another, almost all stories follow the curve to some extent and so it has become a wildly popular topic among those who teach creative writing. The traditional arc is broken up into five stages which are in turn often broken into smaller components. If you think about your favorite book or movie, it's likely that you will recognize each stage. The stages are: Exposition, Rising Action, Climax, Falling Action, Resolution. The Five Stages of the Story Arc The exposition is the beginning of the story leading up to the curve and it's where we get grounded in the story. It's when we carry our book as we're reading to the kitchen, make a cup of tea, and then go burrow into a blanket to snuggle in. (Or put the book away if we aren't hooked, but more about that later.) We learn who is the main character, where and when the story is taking place, and what the character wants. That "want" is going to be a powerful motivation to moving the story forward. The rising action is the where the story starts moving forward. It makes up the bulk of the story with conflicts and challenges and it can be broken down further into four distinct components. A [trigger] provides some sort of insight to the main character that what is wanted can be obtained despite any doubt or fears they have. The [quest] is how the character gets past those doubts to go after the wanted thing. But then, [surprise]! - there's something more that raises a true fear and understanding of what failure could cost. And finally, the character makes a [critical choice] and decides getting the wanted thing will be worth every risk. All of this rising action and turmoil (whether it's internal or external) is ramping up for a big battle in the end and that big battle is the climax. This is when we find out, usually along with the main character, what that character (and us as extensions of that character as the reader), needs. Not wants! -- Needs. Finally, we have resolution and a return to order or a normal world. We see the main character returning home and taking his place once more in the world, albeit, changed in some way. There's often some sort of celebration or recognition of the main character having gone after what was wanted and achieving what was ultimately needed. Other Resources Several authors and writing professionals have created story arcs for the different genres. Search the Internet for "story arc" and the genre of your manuscript to see if one has been made for your genre. These are meant to help you understand from the unique perspective of your genre what each of these components reflect. This may be more helpful that the short description I've provided above and give more guidance in completing the exercise below. When you do your search, you may run across beat sheets. "Beat sheets" are another way of presenting a story arc in a less graphical way. Beat sheets are often set up as spreadsheets that list the "beats" in one column, a description of the beat/component in the next, and calculations of page or word count where each beat should be falling. If you are trying to shoot for a specific word count, you usually can recalculate the beats based on the total word count. Some of the beat sheets are set up to do the calculation for you. If you can't find a story map specific for your genre, visit Ingrid Sundberg's blog and see her Archplot Story Structure download. It demonstrates each of the pot points in several different ways. https://ingridsnotes.wordpress.com/2013/06/05/what-is-arch-plot-and-classic-design/ Why Map a Completed Story to the Story Arc? Mapping your completed story to a story arc is one more step to rooting out plot holes and fixing them. It will also make sure you have all the elements of a story that a reader expects to find in a story and that all those elements are in the right places. Exercise: Map Your Chapter Summary to the Story Arc
Before you get started creating your OneNote page, take your Chapter Summary outline from Day 5 and highlight all the items in your Chapter Outline that create tension and lead up to the climax. We can use this highlighted text for two exercises, including this one.
Considerations
DOWNLOAD: Story Arc Worksheet Template Instructions Tips for working by hand If you'd like to work on notepaper or set up your own table in your favorite application, include the columns listed above. The percentage listed is approximately the size you should make each column. If you are going to work by hand, give yourself plenty of space to complete the descriptions and notes for each component. Return to the Table of Contents Go to Day 10 - Strategies for Editing From Your Worksheets 5/3/2019 Day 8 - Find Your FlowOrganize Your Workspace
Week one of editing is in the books! Well done! Of course, now we get down to the challenge. Editing is a lot like completing a puzzle. Sometimes the pieces don't fit even though they look like they should. Sometimes all the pieces come together with hardly any work at all. And sometimes we have to spin some stuff around until it fits into place. Sometimes we lose a piece under the table. It's always fun when you get a piece from another box too, right? You may have started one worksheet each day, or you may have created all your worksheets in one day and are now ready to spend the next six days reading and annotating. You may be thinking to yourself, "This is a lot of worksheets." You're right. It is. I recommend you give yourself plenty of space to work. If you are working on hand-written outlines, find a place where you can spread out. You will be picking up and setting aside the various pages. A lot. If you are working strictly on your computer, and have dual monitors, you might try using Cascading Windows. To cascade your windows, follow these steps:
If you are working on your computer, a table device, or your phone, things will be a little more challenging for you as you swap in and out of outlines. In this case, think about printing a copy of your book if possible so you can read through the paper copy while working the outlines on the computer. Find Your Flow Once you've gotten the workspace under control, the next step is to find a rhythm to Read-Notate-Summarize-Repeat. When I first start my big picture edits, I like to start with my Setting and Character Analysis worksheets on top, and the reason is because the first handful of chapters are when you introduce characters and build their world. Somewhere about a quarter of the way through, you will find you are reaching for those worksheets less and by the time you are half-way through, you may not be reaching for them at all because your characters will be on pretty solid footing. You will only need those worksheets for major shifts or reveals...those ah-ha moments when readers think, "Oh, that's why she did that." Try to read through the chapter without stopping to edit as much as possible. Only pause when you have read a character or setting attribute. Stop mid-scene to notate items that are details about characters or setting. After you have finished reading through the chapter, then complete the Chapter Summary, Timeline, and Conflict worksheets while the chapter is still fresh in your mind. If you can't remember something, flip back and reread. If your chapters tend toward the long side, you can break your chapters down into scenes. Use a Highlighter Use a highlighter judiciously. Whether you are working in a paper copy of your book or with an electronic version, the highlighter will be your friend when you are trying to get through massive amounts of text in a relatively short period of time. If something doesn't read right, don't fix it - highlight it. If you have a specific note you need to make so you don't forget why you highlighted it, use Comments or make a note on one of the outlining worksheets. It doesn't matter if the worksheet isn't expressly made for whatever notation you are making. The point is to capture everything you think you need to fix but stay in your groove. Okay! Let's get reading and annotating! DOWNLOAD: Instructions for Analysis of Outlines Template Instructions Return to the Table of Contents Go to Day 9 - Map Your Chapter Summary to a Story Arc 5/3/2019 Day 7 - Outlining - Chapter ConflictChapter Conflict Without conflict, the character has nothing to drive them forward and the reader won't care about the character. If the reader doesn't care about the character, they don’t care about the book. Readers who don't care about the book won't leave a review, or worse, they will leave a negative review. So let's crank up the conflict in our stories and get those readers feeling bad for our characters! Conflict comes in many flavors, though generally when conflict is discussed in relation to the plot, it is speaking about the main character being up against something else. The something else can be another character, the character's self, nature, society, or something unnatural like fictional beasts, an omnipotent being, or technology. It is these conflicts that engage the character and by extension of that, engage the reader, so it is in the writer's best interest to make sure conflict is handled well in a story. Since variety is the spice of life, the conflict in our stories should be from all different sources and occur on different levels. Consider the difference between a slight disagreement to a full-out fistfight, or a dash through the rain compared to being stuck in a basement as a tornado sweeps through town. Remember too that all of our characters will handle stress, whether slight or severe in different ways, so where our main character might brush off a slight disagreement with their significant other, a disagreement with a coworker might be handled in a very different way. Finally, it's good to keep in mind that all these "little" confrontations will weigh on our characters in the same way they weigh on us. A couple of little things or even one big thing might be handled just fine, but if more and more start heaping on, we eventually reach a breaking point. The breaking point usually results in an emotional outburst of some sort (depending on the character), but the type of outburst can vary, again, depending on the character and the character's personality. Today's exercise will be about discovering all the points of conflict in our story, whether it is minor or major and indexing it so we can determine if we've heaped enough on our characters to reach the breaking point and get an emotional response from the reader. Today's Task
Days 3 - 7 are activities you can do in tandem with each other. Focus on understanding the steps you need to complete for today's outlining by working through Chapter One. As with the other outlines, today's process should be about creating today's worksheet and understanding how to use it rather than reading through the whole story and completing the outline as a single task. This is because you can read through each chapter and complete the various outlines all together and save yourself some time rather than reading through your story three or four times in a row. Remember, this is a fact-finding mission. You are analyzing what you actually wrote, not remembering off the top of your head what you intended to write. Exercise: Create a Conflict Worksheet If you are creating your notes in your OneNote Novel Editing notebook, follow these steps to complete the exercise:
Chapter Summary Parameters Chapter/Scene - Write in the chapter number or a short description of the chapter and scene. For shorthand notation, use C1S1 to represent Chapter 1 Scene 1. Point of Conflict - Provide a concise description of every conflict the main character runs into throughout your story. Every bit of aggravation should be listed, whether it's a thunderstorm, a bully, a burnt dinner, self-doubts, or a computer crash. If it gets in the way of the character's path to getting what they want, write it down. Methodology - Explain how the tension builds conflict for the character. Analysis of Conflict Once you have indexed all your points of conflict, you can analyze the stressors to see if you need to make any modifications. Review your list and ask yourself the following questions.
If you are working on Days 3 - 7 in conjunction with one another, you may have done enough today by creating your worksheets and reading chapter 1 five times in a row to get a good understanding of how you will be completing each worksheet to dig out the big plot holes. Try chapter 2 to make sure it all clicks if you need to. Day 8 will be how to find a flow to reading all the material of your novel and completing the worksheets all at once. It will give you a little more guidance on how to manage all the outlines while you read all your chapters. If you have time to begin reading more chapters after creating your Day 3 -7 outlines, go on and read Day 8. If creating your worksheets and working through Chapter 1 is all the time you have available for today, then read Day 8 when you are ready to get down to business. DOWNLOAD: Chapter Conflict Worksheet Template Instructions Tips for working by hand If you'd like to work on notepaper or set up your own table in your favorite application, include the columns listed above. The percentage listed is approximately the size you should make each column. If you are going to work by hand, don't draw the rows in until you start working and then add the rows as you complete each chapter. Next Steps If you've finished creating all the Outlining worksheets and have completed each of them for Chapter One of your book, you are ready to start the tedious process of reading and annotating. Read Day 7 for tips on preparing your workspace and using all the Outlining worksheets. Return to the Table of Contents Go to Day 8 - Find Your Flow |