By Stephanie Payne Hurt
Writers are special
people in a lot of ways. We have stories and characters that run rampant inside
our head. Every writer has a different style of getting the story out and ready
to write. For me that means it’s time to complete an outline, well actually two.
One is the story outline and the other is the character outline.
That’s when I sit down
while the story is still fresh in my mind. Most of the stories come to me from
start to finish, but others come in waves, sometimes I get the ending before
the start, which can provide a real challenge. This is when I get started on
the outline of the images in my mind.
Since I now use
Scrivener to write my manuscripts I can put the outline in and expand it from
there. Also, if a certain part of the story comes at me stronger, then I can
work on that ahead of the other chapters. I’ve actually written the middle of a
story before the first part. Amazingly, it worked out and I actually wrote
faster that way.
My outline stays
somewhere near me at all times on my computer, in Scrivener and printed. That
way I can go back and check a scene five chapters back. Of course as any writer
does, I struggle from time to time on a certain scene. It feels like I can’t
get it exactly as it needs to be. That’s when I move ahead to a chapter that
seems to work out better. I can always go back to the problem chapter later.
As my outline comes
together I have another outline working too. The character outline is filled
out as I go, that way the characters stay straight on paper, even if not my
head. All writers know the horror of forgetting something significant about a
character, then diving into the manuscript to find out the missing link. But
with a character outline, well you have it at your fingertips. Everything from
hair and eye color, to scars and how they came to be, down to birthdates and
everything you’d need to know about this character. Sometimes I even add places
into the character outline too. If it’s a place that will appear often in the
book, then you need to keep your facts straight.
Now, don’t get me wrong,
sometimes my outlines change slightly as the story progresses. A character may
need tweaking and that’s possible too. The book I finished this week went along
with the outline for about 12 chapters, but then something happened to change
the course of the story. As I look back on the finished story now, I’m glad I
made the change, but I couldn’t finish it without the original outline to keep
me going.
If you have any
questions about how I outline, please contact me. I’d be glad to help you out.
I always say writers have to stick together!
____________________________________________________________________
Stephanie Payne Hurt has
been writing stories since she was a teenager, but only started publishing her
work in 2012, 30 years later. The romance genre drew her in at an early age.
Since 2012 she's published over 15 Romance novels/novellas. Stephanie is a busy
lady. She's a Children's Minister, Accountant, wife and mother along with a
blogger and writer, along with starting a publishing service called Horseshoe
Publishing alongside her publisher. It's been an exciting ride and she looks
forward to what the future holds for her writing. Currently she writes romance
ranging from Christian, Contemporary, Suspense and Cowboy. Her work is
available at many online retailers, on her website and in a bookstore in Zebulon,
Georgia near her home. Come by and visit her at http://www.stephaniehurtauthor.com/ and
subscribe to get updates and release dates, also her monthly newsletter! Don't
forget to join her Street Team for all the new updates and to get free chapters
of upcoming books and lots of other prizes.
Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/StephaniePayneHurt Twitter: @StephanieHurt4 Blog: stephanie-hurt.com
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