By Beth K. Vogt
Every
book I write begins with a fast draft. Every fast draft is followed with a
rewrite. After letting my manuscript rest for two to four weeks, I take a two-level
approach to bring the words in my fast draft under control:
Go
Big. Stay “big picture”
for your first go-round of tightening your manuscript. Look for
Scenes
that drag at the beginning or at the end. Beware backstory dumps at the opening of a scene.
Don’t add information into the scene that you, as the author, need to know, but
your readers don’t. Eliminate where you wrote all the reasons why your
characters do the things they do and all the things they’ve experienced before they
appear in chapter one. Also, avoid the temptation to resolve the tension in a scene
before moving on to the next scene or chapter. Enter the scene five to ten
minutes late and leave the scene early. Go ahead: delete those paragraphs.
Circular
writing, where you revisit the same plot point again and again. How many of your scenes are about
how your hero and heroine can’t fall in love because she’s hiding a secret from
him? Cut ’em. Instead, deepen your
plot by figuring out what else is going on in your characters’ lives. If
there’s nothing else happening, it’s time to do some major replotting.
Opportunities
to tell the story “between the quotes.” Look for scenes where your point of view (POV)
character is enmeshed in rambling introspection. Get out of their head and get
the scene “between the quotes” by crafting it into dialogue between the POV
character and someone else. Dialogue equals action.
Go
Smaller. After
tightening your writing by considering the big picture, zero in on more specific details, such as
The
opening and closing sentences for each scene. You want the first sentence of your
novel to hook your readers. Don’t miss the opportunity to pack a punch at the start
and finish of each scene, enticing your readers to keep turning pages.
Story
world: Think
details by weaving in the five senses and the surroundings your characters live
in. But pick the best ones, utilizing them as symbols and metaphors, so that
they help you layer in emotion.
Bad
habits. At
times, I’ve fallen in love with the words so
and just and but, all common minor missteps—and all opportunities to tighten my
writing. Remember some of those sentences you loved as you wrote them—that at
the same time seemed a bit familiar? Maybe it’s because you’ve written that
sentence or phrase somewhere else in your manuscript—or even in another book.
Find them and delete them.
It’s
easy to nitpick our way through our manuscript, decreasing word count. But
tightening your writing is removing whatever slows your story down, or as
author Elmore Leonard said, “Try to leave
out the part that readers tend to skip.”
__________________________________________________________________________________
Beth K. Vogt is a nonfiction author and editor who said she’d
never write fiction. She’s the wife of an Air Force family physician (now in
solo practice) who said she’d never marry a doctor—or anyone in the military.
She’s a mom of four who said she’d never have kids. Now Beth believes God’s
best often waits behind doors marked Never. Things I Never Told
You, releasing May 2018, is Beth’s first novel in her women’s fiction
series for Tyndale House Publishers. Beth is a 2016 Christy Award winner, a
2016 ACFW Carol Award winner, and a 2015 RITA Award finalist. Her
2014 novel, Somebody Like You, was one of Publishers Weekly’s
Best Books of 2014. Having authored nine contemporary romance novels or
novellas, Beth believes there’s more to happily ever after than the fairy tales
tell us. An established magazine writer and former editor of the leadership
magazine for MOPS International, Beth blogs for Novel Rocket and also
enjoys speaking to writers’ groups and mentoring other writers. She lives in
Colorado with her husband, Rob, who has adjusted to discussing the lives of
imaginary people, and their youngest daughter, Christa, who loves to play
volleyball and enjoys writing her own stories. Connect with Beth
at bethvogt.com.Beth’s links:Beth’s Website Tyndale Media Center-where
you can download press materials like: Media Alert, interview questions, Author
Q & A, author image, book cover image, etc. Author Image Book Cover Image Author Bio Beth’s Blog Pinterest | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram
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