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How many do you have going at any one time? I find my attention (or focus, at least) shifts back and forth between three or four.
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How many do you have going at any one time? I find my attention (or focus, at least) shifts back and forth between three or four.
I'm resisting starting any new ones and have been successful for a while but.... There always seems to be a plot bunny humping my leg....
Right now, two. With one in the planning stages.
Two is enough. I don't have enough extra time to actually devote enough attention to them both so the end result is that the most finished one - ISN'T! And I tend to miss even more mistakes in editing for grammar and content.
And, of course, the one that's currently being submitted on a query for publication is the one where I just caught a glaring mistake. On the second page no less.
*sigh*
Just writing one narrative, I drive myself crazy with keeping track of continuity. I will be in bed, almost asleep, and suddenly be wide awake, thinking, "Wait a minute, did they do that on Tuesday or Wednesday?" or "Did I actually give the neighbor a name?"
Just writing one narrative, I drive myself crazy with keeping track of continuity. I will be in bed, almost asleep, and suddenly be wide awake, thinking, "Wait a minute, did they do that on Tuesday or Wednesday?" or "Did I actually give the neighbor a name?"
I don't know how I'd deal with trying to keep several narratives straight at once.
Lol.
All my friends and family know I write. We'll be having a conversation on some random subject and I'll suddenly interject a thought or idea about the current work.
"You know where I'm having problems with showing Character A being so conflicted with Character B? What do you think if I..."
I'll then summarize the thought for them. Once done I flip back to the topic of the conversation as if nothing weird just happened. The looks I get...
Keeping track of details is why I use flow charts for each story. From the flow chart I make a chapter outline and then (generally) follow the outline as I write. I don't include specific details in the flow chart/outline because I can keep that in my head once I picture the scene or character.
The flowchart idea works well if you want to write to formula. Go reverse engineer any book to get the sequence of events and create a flow chart of them. Then, write your next story following that sequence of events.
Box #1 - introduction or forward (In a galaxy far far away...)
Box #2 - character intro and initial universe creation (there lived a reindeer with a nose that glowed on foggy nights)
Box #3 - first conflict (when suddenly, ALIENS landed on the planet and started abducting all the cute girl reindeers!)
Box #4 - angst (I'd help save the girl reindeers but nobody loves me. Oh look, I just made glowing snow with my nosebeam. But, no one cares.)
And so on to the climax - (and the reindeer scientists turned the glowing snow into a power source for a new planetary defense laser that shot the invaders' ships from the sky. "Oh Randy, you are so bucked up." The vixen showed her appreciation for the heroics of the scientists at converting Rudy's awkward nose into something useful. The End.)
The flowchart system works. For me at least.