spankableBelle
His unruly kitten
- Joined
- Dec 23, 2001
- Posts
- 17,204
I love, love, love learning about the writing process of others... I always find inspiration.
I'm a pantser. Until about 1/2-2/3 of the way through a book, and then I'm a plotter. Of sorts.
That's not how it's always been with me. When I first started writing, I was a pantser all the way, beginning to end.
My process has changed over the years.
I get ideas and try them out.
I not some down and come back a while late and think WTAF was I thinking?
Sometimes characters come first, other times a simple line of dialog comes first.
I use Google docs for my rough drafts, print for revisions and edits, Word for the final story/book, Vellum for formatting. This doesn't change for me.
I used to be able to write stories long hand. That isn't how I work anymore, though I hope it'll come back. I enjoyed it, was able to drill deeper into it, but my brain doesn't have the patience right now.
My process includes daily writing sprints, especially on a deadline.
I can usually get to the 1/2 way point in a book quickly, but the middle is a slog and I'll start something new, and then some else, and yet another thing after that. I usually have 3-4 projects going at the same time. Different tones, different levels of heat, etc...
That is something that has worked for me since I began writing back in Jr. High and something that still works and remains constant.
This is a great thread.

I'm a pantser. Until about 1/2-2/3 of the way through a book, and then I'm a plotter. Of sorts.
That's not how it's always been with me. When I first started writing, I was a pantser all the way, beginning to end.
My process has changed over the years.
I get ideas and try them out.
I not some down and come back a while late and think WTAF was I thinking?
Sometimes characters come first, other times a simple line of dialog comes first.
I use Google docs for my rough drafts, print for revisions and edits, Word for the final story/book, Vellum for formatting. This doesn't change for me.
I used to be able to write stories long hand. That isn't how I work anymore, though I hope it'll come back. I enjoyed it, was able to drill deeper into it, but my brain doesn't have the patience right now.
My process includes daily writing sprints, especially on a deadline.
I can usually get to the 1/2 way point in a book quickly, but the middle is a slog and I'll start something new, and then some else, and yet another thing after that. I usually have 3-4 projects going at the same time. Different tones, different levels of heat, etc...
That is something that has worked for me since I began writing back in Jr. High and something that still works and remains constant.
This is a great thread.