A questions for short story writers
Mar. 21st, 2006 12:00 pm...especially if you write novels as well...
Do you sit down and start that first paragraph, that first scene, is your approach different depending on whether it's part of a novel or a shorter work?
I'm about 4-5 pages into Incident, and I find myself weighing every word and trying to fit every hint and shade into the first few paragraphs. This is going to be a longer short work, 10K or more, so I have a little room to maneuver. And I want to allude to Jani's backstory and meanwhile, the plot itself is happening.
Just wondering.
Do you sit down and start that first paragraph, that first scene, is your approach different depending on whether it's part of a novel or a shorter work?
I'm about 4-5 pages into Incident, and I find myself weighing every word and trying to fit every hint and shade into the first few paragraphs. This is going to be a longer short work, 10K or more, so I have a little room to maneuver. And I want to allude to Jani's backstory and meanwhile, the plot itself is happening.
Just wondering.
no subject
Date: 2006-03-22 12:57 am (UTC)Every Word Need to Count, yes, but that doesn't mean you can't write until you figure it completely out. Most of my short fiction is written until I do figure it out, and then I go back and distill. There's a fair amount I discover I don't need on the rewrites.
Novels? A whole different matter: write until it's so big I can't imagine how I'm going to resolve everything. Stop.
(Eventually I get finished, but it's usually two years on pause before I can face tying knots in all my open threads.)
no subject
Date: 2006-03-22 02:15 am (UTC)I should probably take this under advisement.