Tag Archive: how to


BryanThomasS: @FiresideMag Btw @talkwordy also said you could host #sffwrtcht entirely in pig latin. (Thu Jan 31 01:35:10 +0000 2013)

BryanThomasS: @FiresideMag @talkwordy Oookinglah orwardfah oootah tih #sffwrtcht(Thu Jan 31 01:35:58 +0000 2013)
BryanThomasS: @FiresideMag @geekstarter needs to check our guest lists. Tons of editors in the past. #sffwrtcht (Thu Jan 31 01:37:09 +0000 2013)
FiresideMag: @BryanThomasS @geekstarter Oh I get it. Just trying to get out of the pants rule! #sffwrtcht (Thu Jan 31 01:37:49 +0000 2013)
FiresideMag: RT @BryanThomasS: @FiresideMag Btw @talkwordy also said you could host #sffwrtcht entirely in pig latin. (Thu Jan 31 01:37:58 +0000 2013)
FiresideMag: anmay I atehay atthay uygay RT @BryanThomasS @FiresideMag @talkwordy Oookinglah orwardfah oootah tih #sffwrtcht (Thu Jan 31 01:38:24 +0000 2013)
galendara: RT @FiresideMag: I think music and bourbon are in order for the #sffwrtcht I am guest-hosting in 30 minutes. But which bourbon and what … (Thu Jan 31 01:39:21 +0000 2013)
BryanThomasS: @FiresideMag We do that deliberately to keep our guests on edge #sffwrtcht Yes (Thu Jan 31 01:40:26 +0000 2013)
BryanThomasS: @FiresideMag Why do you think I keep doing kickstarters? Bribing @twitter ain’t cheap ;) #sffwrtcht (Thu Jan 31 01:41:36 +0000 2013) View full article »

BryanThomasS: Upcoming on #sffwrtcht 9/05 @KDMcEntire 9/12 @KittyNorville1 9/19 @author_sullivan 9/26 @ClaireAshgrove 10/03 @LarryCorreia10/10 @cischafer (Thu Aug 30 00:51:38 +0000 2012)

sffwrtcht: Welcome To Science Fiction and Fantasy Writer’s Chat #sffwrtcht a weekly chat where we interview authors, editors etc abt #scifi & #fantasy (Thu Aug 30 01:00:55 +0000 2012)
sffwrtcht: Tonight, author, editor, and outliner extraordinaire @robynmcintyre is going to lead us in a discussion of outlining #sffwrtcht #darkside (Thu Aug 30 01:01:28 +0000 2012)
sffwrtcht: Be warned. Resistence is futile and you wouldn’t like her when she’s angry. @robynmcintyre Thanks for joining us! #sffwrtcht (Thu Aug 30 01:01:51 +0000 2012)
robynmcintyre: Welcome to the dark side of writing. Bwahahaha Now I have you in me power! #sffwrtcht (Thu Aug 30 01:02:01 +0000 2012)
BryanThomasS: @robynmcintyre Cool. #sffwrtcht (Thu Aug 30 01:02:05 +0000 2012)
Jaleta_Clegg: @robynmcintyre Do you have cookies? I heard the dark side has cookies. #sffwrtcht (Thu Aug 30 01:02:19 +0000 2012)
shadowflame1974: @robynmcintyre I thought outlining was the light side? #sffwrtcht (Thu Aug 30 01:02:25 +0000 2012) View full article »

sffwrtcht: Future Guests 5/30 @thenewauthor 6/06 @samsykesswears 6/13 @pvbrett 6/20/12 @abrahamhanover 6/27/12 @leahpeterson 7/11 @debcoates #sffwrtcht (Thu May 24 00:50:28 +0000 2012)
HunterFaith: I’m on at #sffwrtcht in 9 minutes. Counting down. (Thu May 24 00:51:18 +0000 2012)

BryanThomasS: @HunterFaith @passionmuse is trying to distract me and soften me up for you. #sffwrtcht (Thu May 24 00:55:16 +0000 2012)
BryanThomasS: @HunterFaith @passionmuse Being as I’m so hard on guests ;) #sffwrtcht(Thu May 24 00:55:43 +0000 2012)
HunterFaith: LOL #sffwrtcht #sffwrtcht (Thu May 24 00:56:10 +0000 2012)
passionmuse: :D I’m being good. Promise. @BryanThomasS is a great host. #sffwrtcht (Thu May 24 00:56:40 +0000 2012)
HunterFaith: Frankly you terrify me, Bryan. #sffwrtcht (Thu May 24 00:57:13 +0000 2012)
BryanThomasS: @HunterFaith LOL I hope not. #sffwrtcht #hyperbutharmless (Thu May 24 00:57:37 +0000 2012)
sffwrtcht: Welcome to Science Fiction Fantasy Writer�s Chat. #sffwrtcht (Thu May 24 00:59:12 +0000 2012)
sffwrtcht: Our goal is to talk w/ writers, editors, & others abt the craft of writing, specifically related to writing speculative fiction. #sffwrtcht (Thu May 24 00:59:22 +0000 2012)
sffwrtcht: Our format is round table discussion. Please restrict ?s to writing craft, business of writing & the specific works of the guest. #sffwrtcht (Thu May 24 00:59:30 +0000 2012)
sffwrtcht: Please wait until your question gets answered to ask another & use the hashtag #sffwrtcht for all questions and comments. (Thu May 24 00:59:38 +0000 2012)
sffwrtcht: We may hold questions at times to allow our guest (or this host) to answer and catch up. #sffwrtcht (Thu May 24 00:59:59 +0000 2012)
sffwrtcht: It�s up to the guest whether the question time will run longer than our allotted hour slot. #sffwrtcht (Thu May 24 01:00:08 +0000 2012)
sffwrtcht: Tonight�s guest @hunterfaith writes two series for @penguinusa, the Rogue Mage and Jane Yellowrock series. #sffwrtcht (Thu May 24 01:00:47 +0000 2012)
sffwrtcht: Born in Louisiana, raised all over the south, using the pen name Gwen Hunter, she writes action-adventure, mysteries, & thrillers #sffwrtcht (Thu May 24 01:01:13 +0000 2012) View full article »

by Patty Jansen

Great. Another how-to post. The internet is full of them. Judging by the popularity of books like Novel-writing for Dummies and 12 Things Not To Include in Your Novel’s First Chapter, people seem to love being told what to do. As if writing a book is a paint-by-numbers thing that guarantees success once you’ve ticked all the boxes.

For writing a novel, you’d better have some solid work practices or your work is doomed to fail. Ahem.

Let me describe my novel-writing process.

Stage 1: I write random crap into a file. Anything goes. It doesn’t have to follow the previous scene. I can be a rewrite of the previous scene. As soon as I hit a block, I press control-enter and start a new page. I set myself an arbitrary goal, usually 1000 words a day that I must add to the novel. Usually, I write a lot more than that, but I find that higher limits actually discourage production.

Stage 2: I sort out all these scenes and half-scenes into storyline order. This would be the stage at which I’d write a synopsis, if I needed one. I may end up having several goes and versions of the storyline, but in the end, I’ll have a file that has the scenes more or less in order, albeit sometimes written in the wrong POV character or in the wrong setting.

Stage 3: polish, polish, polish.

It’s chaotic, and in the middle I may not see the wood for the trees. Now, what is so unusual about this method?

Nothing. It’s chaotic. I has a let’s-throw-wet-spaghetti-at-the-wall-and-see-what-sticks element about it. It’s not particularly efficient, but it’s mine. It cannot be found in any how-to books, but it is how my process has developed in the course of writing many novels, and it works. I’m a pantser at heart, and rigid outlines written prior to the storytelling bore to death. I also recognise that at some stage, you need to bring structure into a novel, and adhere to it, or the novel will forever meander between directions you could possibly take with it. Say after me: there are a thousand different things I could still do with my novel, but does that mean I have to do them? View full article »