Hiking through the Wilderness
“I don’t know.”
That’s my response whenever I get
one of two what has come to be frequent questions:
1. Where
do you get your ideas?
2. How do
you come up with all this?
It all sort of…just…happens. The
ideas come whenever they feel like it. When I’m driving, standing in the
grocery store line, lying in bed before I go to sleep, in the midst of writing
guest blog—hold on, I’ll be right back…
Hey. Now, where were we?
Ah, that’s right. I don’t know my
ideas’ origins. I’m just glad they come. What I can (semi) intelligently speak to is how I take those ideas and
process them into stories.
In my view, there are two vastly
different ways to approach writing. You can do extensive research, outlining of
scenes, setting descriptions, character profiles, etc. before ever writing word
one of the manuscript. I call this sort writer (rather unoriginally) “The
Planner.”
Imagine you’re hiking down some
beautiful mountain trail, on your way to have lunch at some outcrop with a
majestic vista. Planners are the sort with map clasped tightly in hand who,
when they spot something interesting off the trail, ignore it and keep going on
the path. They’ll reach their destination long before the other hikers, but
they might have missed something truly spectacular in the process.
The polar opposite of The Planner
is a writer who sits down at the keyboard with a (hopefully) general idea about
what they will be writing and…off they go! Thinking ahead? Bah. Waste of time.
This type of writer I have dubbed (slightly more originally) “The Pantser.” As
in flying by the seat of their pants.
Imagine you’re back on that
mountain trail. Smell the pine trees?
A Pantser is the sort who you’d
find meandering about the wilderness, forging a trail as they go. They risk
never getting to that vista, they more than likely will need to backtrack
numerous times because they’re quite lost, but their journey is full of
surprises. Some may be wonderful (Hey, look!! Sasquatch!) some may be utterly
mundane and uninteresting (hey, look…a rock).
When I started writing, I was
mostly a Pantser with a rough map scrawled out on the back of a napkin. In the
case of Progeny (and the series), I knew where I was starting and where I would
end. The rest? Well, it sort of just happened. Still is happening. I’m editing
the third in the series now.
An example of those happy
surprises that come from pantsing (look, it’s a verb, too):
Nundle Babblebrook, many people’s
favorite character and rather important part of the series, was an accident. I
started writing a chapter from the point of view of what I thought was going to
be a throwaway character, only I liked writing him so much that I completely
rearranged things to incorporate him. Had I been a Planner at that point, poor
Nundle might not have made it.
Now, as time has gone on, I’ve
found myself slowly migrating along the spectrum toward being a Planner. While
pantsing it can result in a more organic, natural story, the process to get
there is a lot—a lot—of work. A lot
of edits. A lot of rewrites. A lot of time. The adage about not wanting to see
how the sausage is made? It applies to books that have been pantsed, too.
Just how far have I evolved? A
while back, I had an idea for a new novel (and no, I don’t know from where the
idea came). As of this moment, I have 17k words of notes, 48 chapters
descriptions, 14 character synopses, 20 settings, etc. Seems like I’m a total
Planner, right?
Well, I can guarantee the moment I
see a shiny object flashing off the hiking trail, I’ll be crashing through the
underbrush to investigate. Like most things in life, the best approach rarely
exists at the extremes, but somewhere in the middle.
Good days ahead.
--R.T.
R. T. Kaelin could combine the Planner and the Pantser and come up with what he now seems to be --- a Plantser --- planting an idea and letting it grow into its natural self! However he does it, it works!
ReplyDeleteIsn't that the truth! I love his writing and the ideas he comes up with.
ReplyDeleteThanks to you both. I appreciate the nice words.
ReplyDeleteWonderful interview, Sandie. You are a reading machine!
ReplyDelete