Plotting, planning and personality (Cecilia Peartree)
I tend to frequent various writing forums,
and one topic that crops up fairly often is whether it's essential to outline
your novel before starting to write. Discussions on this tend to stray into the
different methods of outlining, and at some point people will usually express
amazement that anyone can write a novel without outlining. This is rumoured to
be particularly impossible in the mystery genre.
Although I'm very firmly on the 'not
outlining' side of this debate, I do plan my novels as much as I can short of
outlining. For my recent NaNoWriMo effort I started out having only a vague
idea for (yet) another story in my mystery series, but during October I did
write very short summaries in rather a pretty notebook of what I thought would
probably happen in the first three chapters, mostly to make sure I got off to
an easy start.
Last week, after I reached 50,000 words, I
hadn't finished the story but I knew where it was going (thank goodness - that
doesn't always happen) so I wrote short summaries of the final few chapters,
mostly to make sure I actually got to the end without falling down any
rabbit-holes. Part of my editing process, which will happen in the next few
weeks, will be to list the chapters with a couple of sentences for each, in case anything has got out of order in the
timeline. I think this is my most common problem when writing.
Coincidentally at about the time I was
finishing NaNoWriMo I also got into a discussion on a writers' forum about Myers-Briggs
personality profiles. Interesting that this way of 'measuring' personalities has
apparently fallen into disrepute just at a time when quizzes on Facebook and
elsewhere can allegedly diagnose your personality according to whether you like
fluffy kittens or venomous snakes better. Incidentally, I have now resolved,
not for the first time, never to do one of these quizzes again after discovering
that the monarch I most resemble is Elizabeth Tudor, probably my least
favourite of all monarchs anywhere.
Anyway, the main point of contention in
this case was to do with one of the traits, which can be either 'J' (judging)
or 'P' (prospecting). I hadn't thought of it like this before, but I was
interested in the idea that people who came out as 'J' might be more likely to
be planners and outliners in their writing life, whereas the 'P's were those
who just sat down and wrote, letting the story take them where it will in the
hope that it will lead them to gold! As it happens, my own result when I did the
test, which I didn't do online but as part of a training course at work, was
only just on the 'P' side. I actually didn't understand what was meant by
prospecting until I had a follow-up interview soon after the test, at which we
discussed this in quite a bit of detail because the tester hadn't been entirely
sure whether to score me as 'J' or 'P'.
So I suppose my writing method sort of backs up this part of the personality profile, although naturally the main point I seized on at the time was that the interviewer told me the reason I hadn't tidied up my desk was because I hadn't had a deadline to do so. From this I also extrapolated that I hadn't tidied my house because I didn't have to, having no family or in-laws likely to descend for a visit. Knowing this is the case hasn't actually made me do anything about it, but at least I don't feel quite as guilty. After all, I didn't choose to have the personality of a prospector.
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