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Joshua Palmatier ([personal profile] jpskewedthrone) wrote2008-11-15 10:06 pm

On Words, Notes, and Maps

So after my little gripe session about all the little things a writer does besides write that take away from the writing itself yesterday, I managed to get down to writing. I only produced about 1000 new words on the current WIP (still untitled). Good words I think. Not that great for an afternoon of writing though. But this is because I ALSO spent a good portion of time writing out a bunch of notes about the plot and characters and such that the hindbrain had revealed the day before while driving home from school. This isn't even close to a plot synopsis. It's mainly just a bunch of short notes of . . . possibilities. Things I thought might be interesting directions for the book or the characters to take. In my experience, about half of these ideas pan out during the course of the novel. The rest just don't fit in the end, when I reach the part of the book where I think those pieces are supposed to go. So while I don't count these words in my progress meter, I do count them as progress on the WIP.

Another thing that I count toward progress is the creation of a map. No maps appear in the Throne books although I did have maps to help me along the way. A map gives me a center and helps me keep organized, but for some reason when I create a map it . . . sets me free. The world starts coming alive because I start thinking about what's over here, and what's there, and what makes that city unique . . . all of these types of questions start spilling forth and it's these types of things that make the world feel real to me.

Unfortunately, one of the consequences of making the map yesterday is that I realized I need to make the world seem more . . . populated. I mean, it's set in the middle of a city and the first scene is early, early in the morning, before most people are out and about, but I need to get across how many people there are, how large the cities, how connected they are with trade and commerce and all that. It doesn't have that closed-in feel yet, so something to work into the new chapter once those characters get to the city. I need it to feel like there are tons of other cities out there, and that people aren't focused on their own little chunk of the world but have a more worldy perspective.

Plus, I need to make the city much more unique and cool. *grin*

So a productive day yesterday on the writing front. Chapter 1 is done, and chapter 2 started. Hopefully I can get chapter 2 finished this coming Friday, and chapter 3 done over Thanksgiving week. Then work on the synopsis.

[identity profile] crowinator.livejournal.com 2008-11-16 04:01 am (UTC)(link)
I'm curious about your map-making, because I often want to make maps for my fantasy stories but have trouble doing an entire world one.

Do you start from the inside and work out (like, start with a main city and then build out until you have the whole country/countries/world) or do you start with an outline of the shape of the entire country/world and work inwards? Or do a combination of both? Does that question make sense?

Yes, please tell us more about the mapmaking...

[identity profile] zornhau.livejournal.com 2008-11-17 08:17 am (UTC)(link)
And, have you posted any of your working outlines online anywhere? Being an outliner myself, I'm curious to seen an outline that resulted in a published novel.

Re: Yes, please tell us more about the mapmaking...

[identity profile] jpsorrow.livejournal.com 2008-11-17 09:43 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't really work from an outline, so I don't have any outlines posted, but I can post what my "plot notes" look like. Watch for that post in the next few days. I just can't do the outlining ahead of time thing. It never works.

[identity profile] jpsorrow.livejournal.com 2008-11-17 09:42 pm (UTC)(link)
Hmm . . . this question prompts me to write a post on mapmaking. My POV on it anyway. So watch for that post in the next few days.

[identity profile] jpsorrow.livejournal.com 2008-11-21 04:12 pm (UTC)(link)
Post on mapmaking is up. If you've still got questions, ask!