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Writing a Novel, Scene by Scene

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Writers come in a variety pack of processes. The most common types – regardless of genre – are pantsers, plotters, and plantsers. We know these terms well, right?

  • Pantsers sit down at the keyboard and see what falls out of their fingertips for a while to figure out how the story will take shape.
  • Plotters lay everything out in advance, so they have a guide for their story.
  • Those rebel Plantsters do a little bit of planning – maybe the inciting incident and the turning points, possibly the All Is Lost moment – but not too much before they write away.

And Then There Are Story Quilters Like Me

These storytellers might do one or all of the three methods above, but probably not in the same way. Story Quilters are writers who divide books into individual scenes that they stitch together later into a cohesive story.

If I want this brain of mine to make continual progress, I must take a story down to a bite-sized chunk of writing. I am not alone in this.

Some writers like Diana Gabaldon, Lorna Landvik, and Janet Fitch (and little old me!) don’t see their stories from beginning to end. Instead, we see glimpses and glimmers that we write down until the whole fabric of the story becomes clear. Janet Fitch originally wrote White Oleander as a series of short stories. Lorna Landvik (Angry Housewives Eating BonBons) has been known to string a clothesline down her hallway during the editing phase, with every scene on an index card. She walks the hall, shuffling the cards around, until the story feels right to her.

The idea of doing it this way gives most of my fellow scriveners hives but hear me out. I have good reasons for this.

Sometimes a Book Just Feels Way Too Big

For some writers, the idea of an entire novel can paralyze you and send your muse back under the covers for the day.

Maybe it’s an ADD thing, or our executive function is too unreliable for a project as big as a book. Maybe focus is a monumental achievement some days. Maybe you are sandwiching writing in between all the other things you must do and you only have a tiny slice of time.

All I know is that I tried a gajillion “linear” beginning-to-end ways in my quest to get a book off the ground and finished and none of them worked. I could start a story, but I couldn’t seem to keep my focus and finish the darn thing. I tried many many fancy things: Fast Draft, the W-Plot, the Snowflake Method. They all helped me be a better writer, but none of them got me to “The End.”  

The only thing I’ve found that can get this brain to the end of a story is to embrace my inner scene writer and let her lead the way.

Let’s get this scene-writing ball rolling with some definitions.

What Is a Scene?

I love how Margaret Dilloway describes it in this post:

Each scene is an event that changes the character’s situation in a meaningful way.

  • Every scene needs something to happen.
  • Each scene produces a change achieved through conflict.
  • Each scene shows how the character responds under pressure.

The hard part: If the scene doesn’t meet these criteria, take it out.

Further reading: C.S. Lakin did a post here at WHW with 10+ questions to consider when crafting a scene. Awesome stuff.

How Long Is a Scene?

Scene length varies depending on a lot of factors, including the genre, pacing preferences for the scene, and the author’s personal style. While thrillers and action-adventure stories often have shorter, snappier scenes—say, in the 1,000-word range—the word count typically goes up in literary fiction, historical fiction, and fantasy stories. So let’s take an average and say our scenes will run around 2,000 words long.

Here’s some math on this (knowing the numbers will change for longer scenes):

If each page is 250 words, that maps out to roughly 4-20 pages per scene.

  • Doing the math for novel-length fiction, you will end up with 50-60 scenes per novel if you keep your scenes at about 2,000 words.

Keep in mind that just as white space draws the eye down the page, shorter scenes tend to keep your readers turning pages. “Only four or five more pages? I can keep reading…”

We’ve all done that. So if shorter scenes work for your story, they can also have the added benefit of encouraging that page-turning effect for readers.  

What Does It Mean to Be a “Scene Writer?” (Aka Story Quilter)

As I mentioned above, all those cool linear “big picture” methods I mentioned above aren’t small enough for me to stay focused. My busy brain says, “Ooooh…GLITTER!” And I’m off doing something else, instead of writing those 50-ish scenes that make up a novel-length story.

It was Diana Gabaldon who shined light on scene-writing as a possible writing process. I read some articles about Gabaldon and how she wrote the Outlander series.

In her own words:

Anyway, yes; I write just about everything piecemeal, including nonfiction articles, book reviews and essays. It’s effective because it works; I’m never held up stewing about What Comes Next— I don’t care what comes next, I just care about something I can see happening. The order of the happening has a logic to it (often, more than one), and that will become clear to me as I work.

When I read about Gabaldon, a light went on in my head. I finally accepted the truth: I’m a scene writer.

The scenes don’t even have to be in order, they just have to be finite. I need to be able to open a writing program, create a document, and save it in the correct folder. I don’t have to see anything except that scene during the writing session.

How Can YOU Use Scene Writing to Your Advantage?

Scene writing isn’t just a way of life for Story Quilters, it’s a powerful weapon in any writer’s creative arsenal.

One of my writing friends, Laura Drake, is a linear writer who gets stuck in the middle of every book. As a pantser, she comes to that terrible predictable place, that muggy limbo land, where her story is going nowhere and she doesn’t know what to do. She wonders if she should quit writing the story altogether. Every. Single. Book.

When she calls me from Limbo Land, you already know what I tell her to do: write a throwaway scene.

Examples of out-of-order scenes:

  • An interview with your main character.
  • A character engaging in a hobby you make up on the spot.
  • A quick trip through their closet, car trunk, or underwear drawer.
  • Figure out their favorite song, and why it’s their favorite.
  • Head over to One Stop for Writers and use some of those cool tools. (Character Builder fun, anyone?)

The point of this exercise is to invite your muse to take you to the next place in your story. And even if you don’t use the scene in your book, you can use it as a marketing tool. Readers adore Bonus Scenes.

Final Thought

Everyone must learn their own process and lean into it to bring their stories into being. For some, that learning journey is the hardest part of being a writer.

You might be part of the triple threat writing process variety pack I mentioned at the top of this post, or a quirky Quilter like me, but I hope you experiment until you discover what gets you to “The End.” Your process doesn’t have to look like anyone else’s.

Whether you’re a Pantser, Plotter, Plantser, or Story Quilter, every single one of us has to embrace our stories one scene at a time.

The post Writing a Novel, Scene by Scene appeared first on WRITERS HELPING WRITERS®.

The Bookshelf Muse is a hub for writers, educators and anyone with a love for the written word. Featuring Thesaurus Collections that encourage stronger descriptive skills, this award-winning blog will help writers hone their craft and take their writing to the next level.


Source: https://writershelpingwriters.net/2024/11/writing-a-novel-scene-by-scene/


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