In the excellent movie The Last Days of Disco, Kate Beckinsale and Chloë Sevigny play book editors at a New York publishing house. In one scene, they read over a formula for a best-seller, which has something to do with creating a really appealing character, putting him or her through hell, and having the person triumph in the end. The proto-hipster guy sneers, “It’s completely formulaic,” to which Beckinsdale’s character replies, “Of course it’s formulaic. It’s a formula.”
I think good plotting is both the least respected writing skill and one of the most difficult. Say what you will about Dan Brown’s The Da Vinci Code, but he knew how to move that story along. People criticize the dialogue of the movie Titanic while not acknowledging the strong plotting and pacing. That shit doesn’t happen on its own. In a novel, there’s no reason why a riveting story line can’t be combined with flawless prose, brilliant insights, and unforgettable characters, except that it’s hard to be good at everything.
Since plotting is such a bitch, and since National Novel Writing Month starts in two days, I’m going to encourage you to approach plotting in a very basic, almost dumb, but useful way.
So here’s your writing challenge: answer one of these two questions!
Let’s say you know who your main character is. What would some of her worst nightmares be? How would she cope with them?
Let’s say you have a vague idea of a conflict. There’s a fascist government controlling everyone, or mean kids at the junior high, whatever. What’s the end going to be? The big finish, the final showdown? If you can figure that out, you’ll have NaNoWriMo by the ass.
Want to go a little further? OK, if you’ve got the end in mind, and you know you have 50K, you can figure out how you’re going to build to that conclusion by making an outline, sort of like this:
- inciting incident – This is the thing that happens that kicks off your story. It’s what jolts your main character out of her usual rut; it’s The Day Everything Changed. You’ll likely want this to happen near the beginning of your book.
- at around 10K – something big happens. maybe it’s kind of a turning point for your character.
- at around 20K – something bigger happens!
- at around 30K – something REALLY BIG happens! even more dramatic turning point for your character!
- at around 40k – OMG THIS IS TERRIBLE WHAT THE HELL
- by 50K – She figured out a solution! (Or: she didn’t. Tragedy!) Some things got wrapped up. THE END.
If you’re scared to make an outline like this because you think it will make the process of writing and discovering less exciting: it won’t. It’s very possible your story will change as you write it, anyway, but having an outline like this really helps in propelling your work forward. It’s the “force that through the green fuse drives the flower” (Dylan Thomas, y’all).
Of course, if you are planning on a finished piece that is longer than 50K, you can adjust how those big events and/or turning points are spaced out. (Or, I suppose, you can plan on going back and adding more description, conversations, ruminations, and such later.) Here are the word counts of some published books, just to give you an idea.
- The Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald – 50,061
- The Catcher in the Rye, J.D. Salinger – 73,404
- Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone, J.K. Rowling – 77,335
- Persuasion, Jane Austen – 87,978
- Song of Solomon, Toni Morrison – 92,400
- The Hunger Games, Suzanne Collins – 99,750
- Wuthering Heights, Emily Bronte – 107,945
- A Tale of Two Cities, Charles Dickens – 135,420
- The Time Traveler’s Wife, Audrey Niffenegger – 155,717
- Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, J.K. Rowling – 198,227
- And many young adult novels are around 55-60K.
In any case, I really believe in plotting before you write. When I started out trying to write novels, I told myself, “Oh, I’m not the kind of writer who plans ahead. That’s not my style!” I began many novels that just crapped out around page 100 because I didn’t really have a strong enough conflict to keep the story interesting. So that was a brilliant use of several years. The first novel I finished, a medieval romance, is a complete mess because I didn’t plot, and I still haven’t had the courage to try to revise it. The first book I plotted before writing was the first one I published.
When you’re a famous author, you’ll be able to get an advance after just submitting a basic plot for a book, rather than writing the whole manuscript. So why not prepare for your inevitable literary superstardom by getting used to plotting now?
Editorial note: Bryn’s prepping for NaNo series originally ran on October 21, 2012 and is being re-run as part of our prepping for NaNoWriMo series.
2 replies on “Prepping for NaNoWriMo: Simple Plotting for Smart Writers”
All good points! Once you’re at a point in the novel where you know what you want to happen when, it’s also a good idea to flesh things out by chapter and note what key things are going to be plot points or things will be resolved later on, and you can also plan where to drop in some foreshadowing. It’s a good thing to do if you’re writing a series as I am!
I use something familiar and really helped me finish (and be satisfied) about my NaNo of two years ago. And you should remember it’s pointers, mini-goals. Not set in stone.