By Gini Koch
Right after the
importance of learning how to “show” versus “tell”, there’s no more vital step
in the writing process than learning how and when to kill your darlings.
What I mean by
“darlings” is a character, a phrase, a scene, a plot point, a running thread,
etc., that you, the author, are so very much in love with that it’s blinding
you to a gigantic and gigantically important fact – the darling is ruining your
story.
I say this as someone
who’s killed more darlings than most others will ever write. I’ve killed
millions of words – massive plot threads, witty one-liners, and entire books
loaded with characters and scenes I adored. And I killed them because they
weren’t publishable, didn’t properly serve the story, or were a distraction
from what the real story was.
That’s not to say you
should hate what you write in order for it to be any good. Far from it. I,
frankly, love what I write. If I don’t love it, if I don’t think it’s the best
I can do, no one else sees it, period. However, you do have to learn when
something you just adore is the reason your story isn’t working.
Beta readers (those good
folks who read your story before anyone else does) are one option. Any time you
have more than one beta reader saying that a character, plot device, or “just
something around this part of the book” is bothering them, you need to take a
closer look at what you’re doing in that area and why. Many times the betas
have picked up that you’ve fallen in love with something that doesn’t work for
this story, even if they can’t articulate what it is, or even enjoy what’s
going wrong.
A good critique partner
can also be an excellent Darling Spotter. Crit partners tend to focus on your
craft, so if your crit partner says you’re indulging yourself, you probably
are, and should determine if those special words really matter to the story.
But what if you have no
crit partner or beta readers? Then it’s all up to you. Reread what you’ve
written. If you’re skimming, figure out why. Evaluate any area you skim during
reread or think about with the “Well I can’t get rid of THIS” attitude. Chances
are some of those will be darlings that are taking the story so far off course
that it can never recover – they can and should be killed.
Sometimes it’s fine to
go off course and chart the new world being discovered. But frequently those
side trips are detrimental to the story and also a colossal waste of time.
Always stop and consider how something you adore fits into the overall goal of
this particular story.
By the way, never delete
your darlings. Cut them and save them elsewhere. Because while they may not be
right for THIS story, on rare occasion you may be able to resurrect them, or a
version of them, in another story.
______________________________________________________________________
Gini Koch writes the
fast, fresh and funny Alien/Katherine “Kitty” Katt series for DAW Books, the
Necropolis Enforcement Files series, and the Martian Alliance Chronicles series
for Musa Publishing. Alien in the House, Book 7 in her long-running Alien
series, won the RT Book Reviews Reviewer’s Choice Award as the Best Futuristic
Romance of 2013. As G.J. Koch she writes the Alexander Outland series and she’s
made the most of multiple personality disorder by writing under a variety of other
pen names as well, including Anita Ensal, Jemma Chase, A.E. Stanton, and J.C.
Koch. Currently, Gini has stories featured in the Unidentified Funny Objects 3,
Clockwork Universe: Steampunk vs. Aliens, and Two Hundred and Twenty-One Baker
Streets anthologies, and, writing as J.C. Koch, in Kaiju Rising: Age ofMonsters, The Madness of Cthulhu, Vol. 1, and A Darke Phantastique anthologies.
She will also have a story in the first book in an X-Files anthology series
coming out in 2015. Social Media Links: Website: www.ginikoch.com
Blah, Blah, Blah Blog: http://ginikoch.blogspot.com/
Facebook: facebook.com/Gini.Koch Twitter: @GiniKoch
Facebook Fan Page: https://www.facebook.com/GiniKochAuthor
Pinterest: http://www.pinterest.com/ginikoch/ Alien Collective Virtual HQ Fan Site: http://aliencollectivehq.com/
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