By H.
W. “Buzz” Bernard
A question I
often hear asked of novelists, at least by other writers, is whether they
outline before beginning to hammer out a manuscript. Or, do they just sit down, an idea aborning
in their mind, and began to craft their tale?
The majority of
authors, it seems, develop some sort of outline. I say “some sort,” because there is no
standardized style of outline. It’s
basically whatever the writer feels comfortable with, whatever gets the job
done.
Outline types
range from perhaps a single page of scribbled notes to what sounds to me like
an excruciatingly detailed delineation: a one- or two-page synopsis for each
chapter. Again, there’s no style guide
here, no right or wrong way of doing things.
If it works for you, it’s the the right way.
What works for
me is to get down a couple of pages of thoughts, including major turning
points, key scenes and the conclusion--or at least where I’d like to end
up. In my most recent novel, Supercell, I had two alternate endings
in mind and really didn’t know which would work best until I got there.
You see, an
outline for me is just a guide. I know I
must get from Point A to Point B, but I don’t know how until I start writing.
The characters and circumstances dictate my route. That, to me, is the fun of crafting
fiction. As Robert Frost said, “No
surprise for the writer, no surprise for the reader.”
To draw a
military analogy to outlining, I view an outline as a strategic plan, the big
picture. I execute the plan through a
series of tactics: my writing. And like
any military plan, it begins to fall apart as soon as soon as I squeeze off the
first round, that is, type the first word.
As necessary, I
go back and amend the plan. I change the
outline. It’s a “living document” that
evolves through an iterative process.
The outline guides my writing, but my writing may feed back into
changing the outline. This may happen
once or many times over the course of cranking out a manuscript.
Once, I did try
to march off on a literary journey without an outline. Other people, I knew, had done it
successfully. Why not me? Well, it turned out I have no sense of dead
reckoning. After about a hundred pages
(roughly 25,000 words), I found myself hopelessly lost in a jungle of blind
trails, dead ends and improbable plot twists.
My only
salvation was to sacrifice my baby to the slashing teeth of a black paper
shredder and allow native beaters to lead me, whimpering, to safety.
I now am a
dedicated outliner.
_____________________________________________________________________________
H. W.
“Buzz” Bernard is a writer, retired Weather Channel meteorologist and USAF
veteran. His debut novel, Eyewall,which one reviewer called a “perfect summer read,” was released in May 2011 and
went on to become a number-one best seller in Amazon’s Kindle Store. Plague, also reached Kindle
best-seller status, and was selected as a finalist in the 2014 EPIC eBook Awards
suspense/thriller category. Supercell,
a fast-moving drama set against tornado chasing on the Great Plains, came
out in November 2013. Buzz worked at The Weather Channel in
Atlanta, Georgia, as a senior meteorologist for 13 years. He served as a weather officer in the U.S. Air Force for over three decades with therank of colonel and receivedThe Legion of
Merit. His “airborne” experiences include a mission with the Air Force Reserve
Hurricane Hunters, air drops over the Arctic Ocean and Turkey, and a stint as a
weather officer aboard a Tactical Air Command airborne command post (C-135).In
the past, he’s provided field support to forest fire fighting operations in the
Pacific Northwest, spent a summer working on Alaska’s arctic slope, chased
tornadoes on the Great Plains, and served two tours in Vietnam. Various jobs, have taken him to Germany, Saudi Arabia
and Panama. A native Oregonian graduate of University of Washington in
Seattle with a bachelor’s degree in atmospheric science. Buzz currently is vice president of the Southeastern
Writers Association. He’s a member of International
Thriller Writers, the Atlanta Writers Club and Willamette
Writers.He and his wife Christina live in Roswell, Georgia, along
with their fuzzy and sometimes overactive Shih-Tzu, Stormy. Stormy’s namesake appears in Supercell. His latest book, Blizzard, available now.
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