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Recipe for First Draft:
¼ cup structure, ¾ cup imagination
By Sheila Williams
Author of Girls Most Likely
Imagination is more important than
knowledge.
Albert Einstein
I’ll tell you something
that you already know: writing is work. It is work that requires
structure and rules: subjects, verbs, semi-colons, question marks,
diagrammed sentences, outline plots, character dossiers, synopses and
query letters. Writing has tools: Jane Austen may have penned Pride and
Prejudice with a quill and ink well; I have the option of using a manual
typewriter or a laptop with wi-fi access. Note taking is no longer
limited to the back of receipts (or the palm of a hand) or cocktail
napkins -- it’s the age of PDAs. Nor is a writer dependent on her or his
personal resources (or memory) for research or plot development:
software can do it for you and you can Google it! If your story doesn’t
feel right or appears to be missing something, drop it into
SuperDuperFictionWriterPlot Organizer XP and your problem is solved.
Voila! A great novel is born.
Or is it?
Maybe it’s just me, but
there’s something missing from the efficiencies, structural rules and
regs, grids, outlines and carved-in-stone thou shalts. Maybe it isn’t
chic or modern, but what happened to creativity? Gadgets and
technological improvements are tools but not the only tools. At some
point in the writing process (perhaps at the beginning?!) the story will
need the cerebral equivalent of elbow grease: creative thinking. Writers
spin stories and their spinning wheel is uncensored thought. Stories
need outlines for clarity but their genesis is in the imagination.
The first draft is the
first step and should have no boundaries. It should be as deep as the
Pacific, long as the circumference of Jupiter, as well-seasoned as
bouillabaisse. No limits -- throw everything into the pot, let your pen
or keyboard take you to wonderful places -- and don’t worry about
spelling, punctuation, grammar or even plausibility. Just put the idea
onto paper before its creative flash goes out -- before you forget.
Writers have different
opinions on first drafts but they all agree that they are necessary and
never perfect. Nora Roberts calls hers the “vomit draft”; Stephen King
recommends writing straight through from prologue to epilogue without
revision. Anne Lamott advises that all first drafts are poopy (I’m
paraphrasing due to recent puppy house-training experience). The first
draft is your opportunity to spread your writer’s wings and soar.
Now is the time to
dream, wonder and experiment. Don‘t take any plot ideas or characters at
face value or fence them in. If your Humpty Dumpty falls off the wall,
do as British mystery writer P.D. James did -- ask questions. Did the
old egg really fall off the wall? Or was he pushed? Maybe the Round One
was despondent over an impending meeting with the King’s Men (I’ve heard
that they were feuding over bridge crossing rights held by a union of
uncooperative trolls). Or maybe he’d had a falling out (pun intended)
with his girlfriend, The Old Lady Who Lived in a Shoe. Was her shoe a
Manolo or a Birkenstock? The story goes in different directions
depending on where she resides. Can you see where I’m going with this?
Rely on your imagination
first -- it is the leader of your “A” team, then pull in the rules,
software and outlines later to refine and refresh the story. The thread
that you’ve spun is the beginning. The garment that you make is the
finished poem, short story or novel.
Without creativity, all
the rules, note cards or plot software in the known world won’t help
your story. Imagination illuminates the possibilities -- it opens the
Pandora’s Box and lets the devils and delights dance together.
As for me, I’m curious
about Little Bo Peep. (Her real name is Brenda Jenkins; I don’t know
what’s up with the “Bo Peep” alias.) What’s really going on with her and
those sheep? You hear the oddest things. Not only that, but it’s time
for a makeover. Petticoats are so 18th century. And then, there’s the
incident with the Three Little Pigs, something about a brick house . . .
but I digress.
Copyright © 2006 Sheila Williams
Sheila Williams
is the author of Girls Most Likely (Published by One World/Ballantine;
July 2006; $13.95US/$18.95CAN; 0-345-46476-1) as well as On the Right
Side of a Dream, Dancing on the Edge of the Roof and The Shade of My Own
Tree. Ms. Williams was born in Columbus, Ohio. She attended Ohio
Wesleyan University and is a graduate of the University of Louisville in
Louisville, Kentucky. Sheila and her husband live in northern Kentucky.
For more information,
please visit the author's Web site at
www.sheilajwilliams.com.
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