crookedletter
Really Experienced
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2024
- Posts
- 254
"Kill your darlings" isn't exactly a truism I live by, but I do think it occasionally has some merit. I'm an avowed pantser: I like to write in an exploratory way, getting to know my characters by putting them in rooms together and see what my subconscious decides to do with them. The result can sometimes be a meandering story, one that runs away from me a little bit and has to be trimmed into submission once I have some idea of where I want it to go.
One recent example, on a long-simmering work in progress I had the main male character taken to a spa and convinced to get a massage. My plan wasn't to have anything sexual happen: unwanted massage parlor incidents have a little too much real-world prominence to be high on my list of sexy things to write about. The idea was more to get the guy out of his comfort zone, get him vulnerable.
But the scene ended up sort of writing itself, and I let it. I knew even as I was writing it that it didn't really fit within the narrative arc of my story. But I enjoyed writing it, and I think it turned out pretty good. It's long, for what it is: from stepping into the spa to the post-payoff haze is over 3500 words.
The point is, I have to cut it. I know I do. It's a long diversion, it adds almost nothing to the story, and right now it's weighing down my draft.
But I can't kill it. Not entirely. I'm considering making it standalone, sort of a long stroker -- insofar as such a thing exists -- or repurposing it into something else.
I've done this with some other things, too: written them for one story, pitched them out because they don't fit, only to find later that they fit within some new work in progress, with some creative reshaping.
I'm curious about other writers' experience with this. Do you kill your darlings* outright and irrevocably, do you leave them in, or do you find ways to repurpose them?
* this isn't intended to be a defense of the expression, which I think people feel strongly against. But we all have to cut shit from our stories, right?
One recent example, on a long-simmering work in progress I had the main male character taken to a spa and convinced to get a massage. My plan wasn't to have anything sexual happen: unwanted massage parlor incidents have a little too much real-world prominence to be high on my list of sexy things to write about. The idea was more to get the guy out of his comfort zone, get him vulnerable.
But the scene ended up sort of writing itself, and I let it. I knew even as I was writing it that it didn't really fit within the narrative arc of my story. But I enjoyed writing it, and I think it turned out pretty good. It's long, for what it is: from stepping into the spa to the post-payoff haze is over 3500 words.
The point is, I have to cut it. I know I do. It's a long diversion, it adds almost nothing to the story, and right now it's weighing down my draft.
But I can't kill it. Not entirely. I'm considering making it standalone, sort of a long stroker -- insofar as such a thing exists -- or repurposing it into something else.
I've done this with some other things, too: written them for one story, pitched them out because they don't fit, only to find later that they fit within some new work in progress, with some creative reshaping.
I'm curious about other writers' experience with this. Do you kill your darlings* outright and irrevocably, do you leave them in, or do you find ways to repurpose them?
* this isn't intended to be a defense of the expression, which I think people feel strongly against. But we all have to cut shit from our stories, right?