In January and February,
stacia_kane had a wonderful series of posts here at FFF about the three-act structure. During the
first post (concerning, not surprisingly, Act One), a related discussion broke out in the comments over our feelings/preferences regarding outlines. I made kind of a long-winded comment about something I'd noticed:
(
Edited version of Jeri's ruminations. )
Comments 38
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Absolutely--some projects need time to grow and breathe before we lock them into an outline.
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I outline in my head: I dream, I imagine, I roleplay. When I find a sequence of events that clicks, I make notes in my mind map. All of these can and sometimes do change as the story progresses and I learn more about the characters and the world.
So it's a very amorphous sort of outline. It guides me for when I feel overwhelmed by the book, and at the same time I don't feel tied to anything.
Make sense?
I consider my first draft my real outline, because from there I have the whole of the story mapped out in a way I can play with in the subsequent drafts.
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I consider my first draft my real outline, because from there I have the whole of the story mapped out in a way I can play with in the subsequent drafts.
Me, too--the rough draft is like a pencil sketch. I can easily erase parts of it, and no one will ever know. ;-)
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http://freemind.sourceforge.net/wiki/index.php/Main_Page
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I like this approach--some call it "leapfrogging". Someone also compared it to driving as far as your headlights would illuminate, and then when you get to that point, the headlights illuminate a little farther down the road, etc.
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But now I write completely organic and I love it. I've been writing my best stuff. I don't ever want to write off an outline again. Ever!
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