Post Revision Exercise

Post-revisions, I snoopy-dance and obsessively check for agent email and drive my family crazy I take a short break to read/study writing craft books. This productive period is after a MAJOR reading binge of non-craft books…the TBR pile is demolished as a reward. And chocolate, of course.

AFTER the book and chocolate binge, I get all zen-ish, looking for enlightenment. Just as each book has a theme, the writing of the book also has a theme (when you look back on the process…hard to recognize while you’re in the midst!) We each can take away something different from a craft book depending on skill level. For me, after a book is finished, my mind’s ready for a little retrospective before diving into the next project. Picking the subject of a writing craft book is easy after thinking back on the writing of THIS book.

(Little tangent….in the SW world, Agile teams do the same, the focus is always improving and becoming more efficient…same thing goals, I’d say!)

The questions to ask yourself are, for the writing and revising of this book:

  • What worked?
  • What didn’t work?
  • What do I need to start doing?

The first two questions are related…you may have made your weekly word count goals but found the content wasn’t always usable post-first-draft. Or you may have tried a new structure for developing your story and realized a major weakness was characters.

The what-craft-book-topic usually comes out of these first two questions :D

The third question is more focused on your writing process. Did the morning writing/editing sessions work better than the evenings? Does a hard weekly word count goal keep you on track? Did you go into this book plotter or pantster style?

 

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Experimental Writing

I am FINALLY out of the revision cave! Book ‘C’ was a blast to write and revisions were much easier than my last two books.

Why? I made a schedule and stuck with it. I made myself accountable to someone on my goals. And – nerd alert –  for this book, I treated the whole process like an experiment.

Experiments during the first draft:

How many pages could I write a day? Could I add a page more per day? Result: Four pages is a good number for me to hit consistently, especially if I want to make my daily goal during my lunch hour. Try #1K1hr on twitter and give your brain breaks between those one hour sessions if you want to attempt more pages than the day before.

Would my story fall apart if I skipped a chapter and moved to a scene I know comes later in the story? Result: Scrivener kept this manageable, as long as I had notes on what happened before and after the scene.

Does my diet affect my writing? Result: I’ve found the things the docs tell us – fruits, veggies, lean proteins – DO affect my ability to stay focused longer without relying on coffee and sugar after 3. This doesn’t mean getting all tree-huggy with the diet, it’s as simple as having a humus and carrot stick snack around 2.

Butt in Chair or Walking Desk? Result: I’m working on the walking desk (a wish list and research items at this point) but I do have a standing desk. I’ve found standing works better for longer stretches of time…I didn’t need to take breaks to stretch or switch positions like I would if I’m sitting.

Sweet, Sour or Chocolate? Result: All, use not at the same time :)

How about you? Have you observed your best writing conditions? Do you have plans to shake up your writing routine?

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