I’m an
outliner or planster, really. I have to
know where I’m headed or I stall out. Then as I write the scene, I let the
characters take over. Occasionally—okay often
they highjack my plan and take off in another direction. It usually works, but
today something happened that took me by surprise.
My main
character suddenly decided to follow a minor character into a café. There, a
conversation led to a surprise announcement. Actually, it surprised both of us.
I wondered for a bit whether I could actually keep this. Was I letting her off
the hook for conflict? Making it too easy for her? Then I remembered a coming
plot point … the black moment and this fit into the lead up to that perfectly.
Wow.
Then the
next conversation she has needed a bit of action around it, so they weren’t talking
heads. That action led to a new plot point that fit. Her earlier conversation
and its announcement played into this new one so perfectly, it was as if I’d
planned it. Wow again.
That’s
when I saw how this new direction would bring about another plot point that need to happen, one I hadn’t yet known how
to make natural and not contrived. This new direction fits in so perfectly,
it’s almost as if it had been meticulously plotted. Amazing.
If this
keeps up, I may have to put my characters’ names down as co-authors.
But if
I’ve learned one thing over the course of writing 10 novels, it’s to follow
your characters. The outline can always bring them back in line if it doesn’t
work, but more often than not, it works because it’s organic to the character.
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While a floppy straw hat is her favorite, award-winning author Ane Mulligan has worn many: hairdresser, legislative affairs director (that's a
fancy name for a lobbyist), CEO of a Community Theatre, playwright, humor
columnist, and novelist. She firmly believes coffee and chocolate are two of
the four major food groups. Ane resides in Sugar Hill, GA, with her artist
husband. You can find her on her
AneMulligan @AneMulligan website, Amazon Author page, Novel Rocket, Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, and Google+.
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