Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Do You Write Linearly or are You a Hopper?


I have to do a short post this week since my kids are on spring break, and we’ve been busy with parks, zoos, and play dates.  Enjoying our balmy 57˚F weather. 

Picture by alceu at stock.xchnge
I just want to share an oddity of mine.  I’ve been doing an editing pass on my novel, and every time I go from the end of the story to the beginning, it takes me a minute to reset myself, to remember that my characters and their relationships with each other are different at the beginning than they are at the end.  It makes me feel good about the story because I can see that relationships have developed and characters have changed.

I’ve heard this advice before that you don’t have to write the story linearly (even if the plot is linear), that you can hop around and write the scene that most excites you.  I read that Stephenie Meyers wrote Twilight this way (I know Twilight again).  She would write the scene that she most wanted to write until she had all of the important scenes, and then strung them all together.  I’m not saying that this isn’t great advice.  If it works, it works.  But I can’t write that way.

I’ve tried to skip over scenes before, and I can’t.  I just don’t work that way.  Every scene changes the character a little bit, and I can’t move on to the next scene until I’ve gotten the characters to the right emotional state.  I’m not saying every scene needs to be perfect, far from it; I only need to know where the character ends up, so I know where he or she is in the next scene.

Sometimes this can be a little frustrating because I can get stuck on one scene for weeks, and there are times when I think I should just skip over it and come back to it, but I can’t.  Believe me I’ve tried.  That's just the way I write.

I’m curious if other writers have this problem.  So tell me about you?  Do you have to write the story linearly or can you hop around from scene to scene?

Happy Easter (a little early).

~MaryAnn  

15 comments:

  1. I'm a linear writer too. I'd love to hop from scene to scene (especially when I'm stuck), but the characters and what they know change too much. Plus, since I'm a seat-of-the-pants writer, the small things that happen in between the big scenes frequently change what I think is going to happen.

    I wish I could write the other way--I think it would be quicker (and easier?), but that's just not the way my brain works.

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    1. LOL, jumping around wouldn't work for a seat-of-the-pants writer. I've found that those small scenes can change those big scenes, too. It's nice to know I'm not the only linear writer. :)

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  2. I try to be linear but it never works. In the end I figure it's better not to fight your process and to just go with what works!

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    1. I agree. You just have to figure out what works for you. Fighting your process is futile.

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  3. When I first started writing, I jumped around a lot. It never got me very far, because if I didn't want to write a scene, that usually meant I'd taken a wrong turn somewhere. I went through like 3 or 4 stories that way, never finishing any of them. I got sick of having a lot of open-ended projects that weren't much more than a handful of unconnected scenes, so my next project had to be written from beginning to end. Sometimes it was torture, but I finished that project in about 3 weeks. My next project took a few months, but I forced myself to write that one without hopping around, and I finished it, too. It's getting harder to power through the slow spots, but I would rather take a year to finish something, than burn myself out just writing the fun parts. I wish I had the dedication it takes to jump around and then come back for the tie-in scenes, but I've learned from experience that I don't have that kind of drive.

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    1. It is tempting to just write all of the fun scenes. :)

      I find that they become the reward for muscling through those important but smaller scenes. I'm glad you found a process that works for you.

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  4. Concur.

    When world building though, I do jump from one scene to the next, but once I've got the daydream in order and sit down to start writing the story, I usually get stuck at the beginning. It's hard to find just the right beginning, isn't it? I do hop around from scene to scene trying to figure out which start is the right one, but once I have a firm beginning, I HAVE to write the story linearly.

    BTW it's gorgeous outside here at my new house. We should hang out so i can pretend all these boxes aren't real for a little while more.

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    1. I too struggle a lot with figuring out where to begin and daydream about the important scenes long before I start writing. :)

      Today was beautiful. I'd love to hang out sometime. Get our little rugrats together. Let me know when you've got some time.

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  5. Sign me up for linear, though I often think of things that I either forgot, or things I now need to put in the past pages and hop back and forth filling those in. I'm a hoppy-editor, perhaps.
    ~Just JIOll

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    1. I hop a little when I edit too. Editing is a completely different process. :)

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  6. I used to write scenes individually, but then I had the problem of getting too attached to certain scenes that ended up not fitting. Now I write linearly - though I will still write out important bits and save them in a separate file. It's amazing how much less attached I become to those words when they're kept apart from the developing story.

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    1. I've found that even when I write linearly, there are still some scenes that I love that really need to go. Cutting them is always tough. I like the idea of writing out some important scenes in a separate file. Maybe next time I get stuck I could try that.

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  7. I write linearly. But like Sabrina, every now and then a scene demands to be written out of place. I'm thinking of a scene in a swimming pool that I wrote recently (Sheena and Sabrina know what I'm talking about.) I doubt it will ever really end up in the story. But it was awfully fun to write. After a few days, I get less attached to those scenes, although pieces of them often end up scattered into other scenes. I think there is value in that. Besides, it's fun.

    The trouble comes when I send them to someone else to read, in the heat of the moment.

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    1. When you become a famous writer, you can put all those fun scenes that had to be cut on your website so that your insatiable fans can read more.

      See, there is no wasted writing. :)

      I hope you guys plan to let us read your collaborated project at some point. Sounds fun.

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    2. Famous writer...yep. Can't wait!

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