[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Original posting 4 August 2009

So how does Jim Butcher at http://jimbutcher.livejournal.com/ suggest that you put together all the bits and pieces? I think of his approach as the top down version. Here's what he lays out:

Page 1 has the basics. Three key parts. What is the story question? The protagonist -- in particular, the tags and traits that identify this person and their introduction. The antagonist, again with tags and traits and introduction. That's it. What is this story about, and who are the two key characters? Pretty simple, right?

Page 2 is where Jim Butcher lays out the story arc or plot. He apparently starts by actually drawing an arc. On the left side, he writes a brief phrase about the opening scene. On the right side, he writes a brief phrase describing the climax. On the top of the arc, he writes down the big middle -- an event or scene that starts the march to the climax -- what knocks down the first domino? In between those, you can mark in any scenes that you want or know that you are going to do. You may want to add phrases that describe scenes connecting it all, getting characters from one point to the next point.

This reminds me of the stepping stone approach, with the opening scene at the top of the page, the climax at the bottom, and other scenes in between. His arc provides a little more organization.

Page 3 on, Jim Butcher does subplots. He uses the same kind of story arc for each and every subplot, defining where they begin, where they end, and what event leads to the resolution.

Character profiles. He does short profiles for every significant character.

Next, he takes each of the scenes from the various arcs and outlines the scenes and sequels -- what is the action in the scenes and what is the reaction from the characters? For every mark and every phrase on each of the arcs, he outlines the scene and the sequel.

He does a rough sketch of the climax.

That's Jim Butcher's skeleton. Admittedly, he seems to mostly be doing novels, often in series, but he says he does this sort of skeleton even for a short story. He lays out all of this before he starts to write.

Clearly Jim Butcher is a plotter, laying out the outline in some detail before he starts writing. There are also pantsers or discovery writers who prefer to do their thinking by writing. I'm not sure that either way is automatically best, but it is worthwhile to explore what works for you. And reflect on it from time to time, deciding whether you need to add something or perhaps drop some pieces of your personal process.

Anyway, we have a contest. A quest, a quest.
Write!
[identity profile] mbarker.livejournal.com
Original posting 17 July 2009

Okay. So let's say you've got some notions, there's a goal, maybe a bit of an inciting incident, some characters, all that stuff swirling around in your head. How do you organize it?

Let's take a look at a website that might help. Jim Butcher writes a very popular fantasy detective series (the Dresden Files) and others, and he's been blogging about his process over here. http://jimbutcher.livejournal.com/ I thought it was a little odd -- he seems to have written the blog postings in order, which means the ones for starting are at the bottom... (psst? Anyone else recognize that Scene-Sequel structure? Yeah, James Bickham's Scene & Structure http://community.livejournal.com/writercises/tag/sequel ) Anyway

Jim's story skeleton is this:
*WHEN SOMETHING HAPPENS*, *YOUR PROTAGONIST* *PURSUES A GOAL*. But will he succeed when *ANTAGONIST PROVIDES OPPOSITION*?
Okay? Pretty simple, right? Plug in
  1. What happens to kick things off? (the inciting incident)
  2. Who's the protagonist?
  3. What's the goal?
  4. Who's the antagonist? How do they oppose the protagonist?
Go ahead. Take the ideas you're playing with, and plug them into Jim's skeleton. (Oh, the foot bone's connected to the ankle bone, the ankle bone's connected to the shin bone, the shin bone's connected to the knee bone, keep on moving up the line...)

When Jim finds a treasure map in his dead uncle's sea chest, he decides to recover the fortune. But will he succeed when the Bloody Hand Gang finds out that there's a treasure out there?

Profile

The Place For My Writers Notes

February 2025

S M T W T F S
      1
2 345 6 7 8
910 11121314 15
161718192021 22
232425262728 

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 23rd, 2025 03:26 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios