No Plot? No Problem!
Chris Baty
Chronicle Books
Nonfiction, Writing
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DESCRIPTION: As long as you can remember, you've wanted to write a novel - a mystery, a space opera, a fantasy, or maybe even a silly slice-of-life tale. You may
have picked at a few outlines and drawn up some background files, or even started a chapter or two, but it never seems to go anywhere. Writing a novel takes time you just
can't spare and talent you just don't have... or does it?
Chris Baty, founder of National Novel Writer's Month (better known as NaNoWriMo), is here to tell you that everything you think you know about writing is wrong. Don't know
where the story is going? Only have one vague idea for a character? Do you even have anything over than a rough idea for an opening scene? No problem; the more you sit and
type away, the more things start to happen. The most important thing, especially for the first draft, is just to sit down, shut up, and write it... in thirty days or less.
Think it can't be done? Think again. Every November, countless people from around the world, be they in their teens or past retirement, take the NaNoWriMo pledge and produce
their own 50,000-word novel. A few of them even go on to clean up, edit, and publish what they write! So stop procrastinating, stop overthinking it, and clear some space on
your calendar. Using the pointers in this book, you too will write a novel in one month flat.
REVIEW: Unlike most of my writing books, Baty's approach isn't about producing a marketable story. He advocates writing first and asking questions later, or just jumping into it with both feet and learning to swim on the way across the river. Whether or not you choose to take on the challenge of editing and submitting it isn't what the NaNoWriMo's about (though, of course, the website has help for those who want to try it, and there's even a NaNoEdMo challenge dedicated to help in the editing effort.) Granted, my writing books all state that just plain writing is the key to doing it well (much like filling sketchbooks, even with scribbles, is the only way to get better at drawing), but none of them crystallize the idea in Baty's no-nonsense approach. He even states something I have actually found out myself, to some degree: too much background work before you get a draft done actually stifles the creative flame. Overplanning can even smother that flame entirely, as you have so much invested in the story that you become afraid to make mistakes, forgetting that a first draft's job is largely to make mistakes and get them out of the way. As an unofficial semi-participant in the 2008 NaNoWriMo (aiming for 30,000 words instead of the official 50,000, just to see if I could do it), I can say with certainty that Baty's just-write-something method can and does produce measurable results - in my case, a 30,000+-page, exceptionally rough draft that nevertheless had characters, a plot, and a beginning, middle, and end. I haven't attempted to edit it into a format fit for public viewing, but another part of Baty's philosophy is that writing shouldn't be just about seeing your name on the bestseller list. You should be writing because you want to write, because you need to write, and because if you didn't write you'd spend the rest of your life regretting the stories you never even tried to tell. Getting into the specifics, I can't say I care for each and every paragraph in this book. Some of his suggestins ran counter to my own instincts and even his own advice (such as his advice to keep the story under wraps to prevent stifling amounts of support from well-meaning outsiders, countered a few chapters later by his advice to call in outsiders to brainstorm new ideas if the creative steam runs out before the deadline.) While I'm nitpicking, I might as well mention that his side notes - written in a worn typewriter font on a dark gray background - were hard to read. On the whole, I found myself agreeing with the majority of it. If you - like me - need an extra push to get moving on your writing dreams, this may be the book to do it.
You might also enjoy:
The 38 Most Common Fiction Writing Mistakes (And How to Avoid Them) (Jack M. Bickham, Writing - How writing goes wrong, and what to do about)
Sometimes the Magic Works: Lessons from a Writing Life (Terry Brooks, Writing - Anecdotes and practical advice for writers)
How to Avoid Making Art (or Anything Else You Enjoy) (Julia Cameron, Art - Common obstacles we place to our own creativity)
How to Write Science Fiction and Fantasy (Orson Scott Card, Writing - Advice on writing sci-fi and fantasy stories, from idea generation to publication and beyond)
Writing Down the Bones (Natalie Goldberg, Writing - Advice on writing)
Who's... (oops!) Whose Grammar Book is This, Anyway? (C. Edward Good, Grammar - Because you can't write clearly if you don't know something about it)
Writing Science Fiction and Fantasy (Crawford Kilian, Writing - How to write sci-fi/fantasy stories that sell)
Writing Magic: Creating Stories That Fly (Gail Carson Levine, YA Writing - Great advice and inspiration for writers of all ages)
A Whack on the Side of the Head (Roger Van Oech, Creativity - Helpful ways to break old thought patterns)
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