Do you always use the computer to write?
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Re: Do you always use the computer to write?
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-- 10 May 2014, 01:26 --
I have a lot of difficulty composing on computers, actually. There's something intimidating about a word document, to me, but something inviting about physical paper. I outline extensively and alwas write things down first, then organize and type them up later. (And I write them all in pen, of course, because pencils are bothersome.)
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-- 10 May 2014, 07:57 --
Um... That was to moderntimes... Wow, my network must be screwing up. It obliterated the entire last page. I wrote before I knew there'd been more content added... Whoops...
-Edgar Allan Poe
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Nathrad, as for the number of drafts, with a computer I have a particular technique -- I'll start a chapter, as, "Ch 24" and save the doc as "ch 24a.doc" in one folder. Then I'll write, say, "ch 25a.doc" and "ch 26a.doc" and so on. Then later, as I need to make a big revision, I'll save the revised chapter as "ch 24b.doc" or "ch 24c.doc", incrementing a, b, c as I go. That way I've got all the different revisions saved so I can go back and cherrypick the sections I really want.
Eventually I'll have all the chapters I'm happy with, but I'm still constantly revising. I'd made a mistake for example with the model number of a gun about a week ago and since I carefully re-check everything I can, I found that it was a H&K (Heckler & Koch) HK417 instead of HK418, so I made the correction.
In other words, I'm constantly revising previous chapters. Last week I'd hit about 40,000 words and reached a pivot point in the novel, so I stopped new writing and went back, carefully and slowly read the whole thing from the start, massaging it, changing a word or two, slightly altering paragraphs and such. No big changes, just small stuff. But now I'm very happy with those first 27 chapters that comprise the 40k words.
As I write, I try to create the next story arc. As you know, for any novel, there's the 1 major arc of the whole novel's premise, and then there are shorter arcs, and shorter arcs within those. For my writing, with the typical short chapters of a mystery thriller, I find that the smaller arcs are about 3-5 chapters. One may outline a gunfight, one may deal with a new major character, etc. Each arc has a "flavor" and rhythm. Some arcs are action oriented, short words, short sentences, lots of dialogue. Some arcs are expository, so there is more narrative, less dialogue, little action, far more complex sentences and longer words. And so on.
So what I do is to write the next arc chapters, then go back and re-read them numerous times, ensuring that there are no mechanical or grammatical errors, plus that the style is good, and then I check back to the previous arc to ensure that the 2 arcs blend. So I am in the process of continual revision and editing, and there is really never a draft #1 or draft #2, but an ever-changing series of chapters. And of course, if I'm making a big change to the chapter, I save the previous version first with the a, b, c technique. That way I ensure that I can go back if needed.
And, of course, I back up to DVD or thumb drive regularly.
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This is exactly how I once was, needing to put it on paper first. I just trained myself to avoid that step and never went back. If you're comfortable with pen/paper of course, go ahead. But if you'd rather not, it can be done, just take some inward pressure. Thing was for me, I found it a useless extra step because I'd eventually have to enter it into the computer anyway. Now I DO however sit and think, no pen or paper, just the inner self and contemplation time. That's where I do my "creative" thinking. Then I plunk down, laptop ready, and start typing away...David Dawson wrote:Presumably it's some kind of pyschological crutch, but I just find I think better if I'm holding a pen, which is why I always start with pen and paper.
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This is true of course, and typing things up is one of the dullest and most frustrating aspects of writing; no creativity, no progress, possibly the odd amendment but basically just data entry.moderntimes wrote:Thing was for me, I found it a useless extra step because I'd eventually have to enter it into the computer anyway.
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I can definitely agree with that! Thoughts are quicker than the handCrescentMoon wrote:I definitely prefer using a computer than writing by hand. Sometimes, ideas flash through my mind really quickly and I want to jot them down as fast as possible. If I'm writing by hand, the writing takes too long and I might forget the ideas quickly. Typing them up is a lot faster and easier to get my thoughts down. Also, I prefer typing because whenever I make additions to what I wrote previously or have a new idea, it's much easier to go back and add things and fix mistakes. If I wrote by hand and decided to make changes, the paper gets really messy and it's harder to stay organized and neat.

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