Tag Archives: writing

What you shouldn’t do in the first ten pages of your novel

Having just read another article about the biggest pitfalls to avoid in the opening pages of a story or a novel, I felt inspired to share my own list which I’ve been putting together during my novel redraft process. Most of these I’ve come across over and over again on agents’ blogs or writers’ communities. Some of them I was explicitly told not to do on my Faber Academy Writing a Novel course, which I completed earlier this year.

My top ten opening ‘no nos’

  1. No dream sequences. I did this one, as did a few of my writing course colleagues. We all – very hurriedly – rewrote after one article about agent pet hates went round our online forum
  2. No prologues. Yep, did this as well. Also now OUT
  3. Insufficient info about the main protagonist(s) (as in how old are they – my beta readers kept saying, ‘hmm thought she was about 40 but then I read on p.100 she was only 25′
  4. Too much backstory. VERY tricky to get this one right. My Faber tutor told me to put my ‘foot on the accelerator and don’t take it off for at least the first ten pages’ (so no backstory in the first chapter if possible)
  5. Protagonist looking in the mirror – BORING. And other such clichéd devices
  6. Not enough info about the story world – where, when, who, what, why. These are the basics but I was interested to see how few of them I had in the first few versions of my carefully crafted first ten pages. It seems that trying to be clever doesn’t quite work
  7. False suspense. This kind of falls into the ‘don’t start the story twice’ category. I do this a lot in my attempts to hook readers in different and intriguing ways. Whatever you do, the suspense must lead up to the main event somehow
  8. Too many points of view, especially if some of the povs are dropped early on.
  9. Misleading contract with the reader ie the first few pages indicate a different kind of a book in tone, genre or protagonist than you actually deliver. Kind of done this one too – busy rectifying
  10. Problems with pace. Also tricky.

On a fairly well-known author’s blog I read that some editors will automatically scrap the first chapter on a new manuscript and make them rewrite after the rest of the ms has been edited and worked over. This approach would work well for me. Once armed with the rules and techniques for writing great story-openings, it is easier to write the beginning with the end in mind.

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Freedom

My current writing project, Split Symmetry, touches on free will.
What is it? Does it exist? Is it an illusion? It’s not up to me to decide, but I enjoyed writing a story which looked at the question. Who is in control? You, me, ‘the gods’?

Butterfly effect

Although chaos theory earns fewer column inches (or screen space) than it did ten or fifteen years ago, the theory of the Butterfly Effect remains. The idea that a tiny action in one place may cause a massive consequence in another is an interesting one. Think of the hurricane on one side of the globe which was caused by a butterfly flapping its wings on the other. It’s one step on from the Buddhist idea of ’cause and effect’.

Karma

A lot of us in the western world use the old phrase ‘what goes around comes around’? But it is an eastern concept. As a child I believed it meant that your exact actions would be done back to you, or that the person subject to your wrong doing would, one day, get their revenge. It doesn’t quite work like that, does it? However, it may be true that bad energy or good energy could come whizzing back over the horizon to complete the full circle one day. So if you committed a mortal sin, what’s in store? Is there any hope?

Redemption

When writing the first draft of Split Symmetry I thought a lot about the 1980s UK tv series ‘GBH’ about a man who had, unwittingly, done something terrible in his childhood. I’m interested in the extent to which our intention determines the good or evil element of our actions. Can good people sometimes do bad things?

If you had your life again?

Would you do things differently?
That, dear reader, is for you to decide.

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Just write

In a recent interview, Stephen King said the following:

I don’t think conceptually while I work on a first draft — I just write.

…And I had a slightly sad ‘Eureka’ moment of leaping into the air shouting ‘Yes!’. All very alarming, but then I have been working on first and second drafts of two as-yet unpublished books for the last two years. This, in addition to my job in digital communications and my somewhat disastrous attempts to bring up a teen, a pre-teen and a baby (now a Terrible Two).

Unsurprisingly, anything which makes me feel better about my writing process is a godsend.

Because I’ve realised over the last two or three years that this is what I do too. On a recent Faber Academy course I was taught how to look at the beginning of a novel in a more conceptual way. That was hard work. Necessary though, and it has transformed my writing.

However, it is extremely difficult to reconcile the conceptual approach with getting the story down into a first draft.

You can plan, but quite often the story changes a bit. Or maybe the characters morph into something a bit different from what you intended (which in turn alters the plot). Ugh. All good fun, but it messes up the beautifully conceived intro pages you’ve spent ages crafting…

So I’ve decided now, I’m with Stephen King all the way.

Get the first draft down then go back and craft!

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The philosophy of love

What is love, connection, spirituality? Where does the life of the soul sit underneath these and how does it all stack up under pressure?

These are questions I pose in my stories and my passion for writing springs from the need to look at these, to turn everything we think we know about our lives upside down and apply a different viewpoint to it.

My aim is for the reader to draw their own conclusions. No answers provided, just questions, and with a bit of luck a fast paced page turner to take them into a different world for a while. If they so wish. As with anything, how my stories are perceived sits entirely with the reader.

A few concepts I’m interested in:

  • Entanglement – the idea that we are all connected
  • Choice – how we determine our fate with even the tiniest choices (or do we?)
  • Passion – how this drives us, sometimes even to self-destruction

Is love a combination of these? Or is it something else again, something which perhaps crosses metaphysical boundaries?

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Five routes to publishing your book

5 book publishing paths
Recently, I came across this infographic produced by Jane Friedman detailing the five main routes to book publishing. It’s very useful!

They are:

  • Traditional
  • Partnership
  • Fully assisted
  • DIY + distributor
  • DIY direct

Each has its own unique advantages and disadvantages but how exciting to have the choice! It’s a great time to be writing.

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