Monday, December 7, 2015

The Second Draft by Jessica P. Morrell


The Much-Needed, but Sometimes Dreaded Second Draft
Jessica P. Morrell
I don’t write easily or rapidly. My first draft usually has only a few elements worth keeping. I have to find what those are and build from them and throw out what doesn’t work, or what simply is not alive.” — Susan Sontag

Jessica P. Morrell
This column is especially meant for those plucky souls who have recently survived November’s hellacious, glutton-for-punishment and yet exhilarating challenge—NaNoWriMo or National Writing Month. But then every writer faces a second draft. And a third….and we could keep counting here, but let’s focus on the second one of a book-length story or memoir. Because you’re in for a deep rewrite along with analyzing, musing, and asking a lot of questions of yourself. 

Your second draft focuses on larger issues, consistency problems if the plot hangs together and the architecture makes sense. A lot of second draft fixes solve structure problems; fix places that needs bolstering or sections that need to be eliminated or relocated. You’re also judging plausibility and motivations. You’ll be making your major revisions at this point, deciding whether you need to change the beginning, ending, or viewpoint. This means you’re searching for scenes that don’t accomplish much, big plot holes, unanswered questions, and wimpy stakes. You’ll make certain your key events occur in the right order. And remain open to change: would allowing for some unplanned, newly-inspired twist transform or deepen the story even if it’s different from your original plan?

Start with a plan. Your first trick is to achieve psychic and emotional distance. Stephen King’s advises letting the manuscript cool for a few months, but for most writers that cooling off period can turn into a deep freeze and you might opt to avoid the hard work needed. A few weeks helps just fine, especially if you’re on a deadline. No matter your timeframe, print it all out in a different typeface than the one you wrote it in. Many mistakes you won’t notice by reading it on a computer screen will become apparent because you’ll be habituated to ignore them.

Next schedule a solid bock to time for reading, note taking, and heavy analysis. It’s best to undertake this in a different place than where the story was written, thus adding even more editorial distance. It’s also helpful to work in a location where you can take long walks while you ponder whether your story is working or needs a major overhaul. I suggest an ocean view or lakeside cottage or mountain hideaway, but that’s just me.  Plan to use a lot of colored ink and highlight sections that need moving or trimming.

Create a story bible if you haven’t already done so. Your bible ensures consistency and connectedness— what this reading and rewrite should achieve.   You might want to list all the scenes in the story along with the change that takes place in each scene. Scenes require change and then fallout. You might want to title your scenes.  Note their time and location, the characters involved and their ranking, their main physical and psychological traits. If it’s a complex story with a sprawling cast, design a family tree or a web of connections.

How do your protagonist’s goals and motivations deepen throughout the story?  After Act 1 often the protagonist’s goals will change, become more personal. A search for a missing person uncovers a human trafficking scheme. And then someone in the protagonist’s family becomes endangered by these heartless criminals.  Perhaps at the end your characters want something far different from what they fought for in the opening. Perhaps he or she is seeing the world with new eyes. Stories where the characters’ priorities and worldview evolve are powerful. Stories where they don’t can seem predictable.

Pay attention to events or motives that are never explained or spelled out as if you’re whispering stage directions to the reader. Note if there are too many dangling subplots or simply too many subplots. Often this draft will be loose and sketchy, lacking in the narrative flow and glue that holds a piece together. Or, it might be written in summary, thus the intimate details and moments that bring the story to life will be missing. This means you’ll be replacing summary with scenes. Notice if the viewpoint is consistent, or if head-hopping is going on. Determine if your story contains surprises, intrigue, and forward momentum
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Make certain that you need the first chapter or scene. Many stories are strengthened by a beheading because they start far before the first crucial actions. Generally backstory isn’t needed in Act 1. If it’s a thriller you need to start with a crisis or disaster, not a tour of the CIA headquarters. It it’s a love story, collide the lovers as early as possible.

Checklist for the First Revision:

·         A good story begins with turbulence or a threat. Has your ‘ordinary world’ been introduced and does this intro include tension, something amiss before the trouble starts?

·         Do your main characters have a physical presence on the page? Have you added to their presence as the story proceeds?  Is the whole visual enough?

·         Have you identified your protagonist’s inner conflict?

·         How about your midpoint? Is it a game changer? Did the story take your readers in a direction they couldn’t have predicted? If so, does the inner logic hold up?

·         Can readers understand where scenes are taking place and the timeframe for the scene? Do you need transitions to bridge events? Is your timeline consistent?

·         Is the story question and main subplot clearly resolved?
  • Are most scenes built from obstacles?
  • Can a scene be cut without affecting the main story?
  • Does each action cause more actions and reactions?
  • Evaluate the order of your scenes—is this the right time to include this action or should it wait?
  • Do you need to add twists and complications if it bogs down, especially in the middle?
  • Is description dispersed in small increments throughout and  via a character’s viewpoint?
  • Do you need to add flashbacks so the characters’ motivations and goals make sense?
  • Do the flashbacks contain action or mostly summary?
  • Do you need to strengthen or add subplots? Or cut some because the story is wandering too far afield?
  • Have you created a plausible tie-in or between the main plot storyline and the main subplot?
  • Are you noticing that a lot of the pages have the same emotions, tone and mood? If so, how can you mix it up?
If you find major problems, don’t panic. Instead create careful notes as if you were an editor addressing a client. Chances are at this point you might need to expand or cut backstory, deepen main characters, cut or combine secondary characters, expand or cut subplots, reorder the scenes to heighten the tension, beef up the middle so that it contains a potent twist, and refine the ending so it truly concludes the plot.  I repeat, don’t panic.

Thanks to Jessica for guesting again. Please check out Jessica's website for even more terrific writing advice and help. I can personally recommend her books as they're sitting on my shelf. Thanks, But This Isn't For Us can be purchased on Amazon.
Do you dread the second draft? Did one thing on her checklist really click with you?



16 comments:

Alex J. Cavanaugh said...

Now that's an in-depth checklist. Even after four books, I now feel I've failed at the second round draft. I've always printed out my work though. Finding mistakes on the screen is really tough.

Pat Hatt said...

I edit as I go so the second draft is sometimes like the 3rd draft. I still find plot holes once in a while that need fixing though.

Susan Gourley/Kelley said...

I always print out my first draft too and write all over it. Thanks, Jessica, for sharing this knowledge.

Christine Rains said...

Excellent article. I'm one of those writers who can't let it cool for a few months. A couple of weeks works fine. And while I'm a pantser, when I do rewrites, I make a lot of notes. Love your check list!

L.G. Keltner said...

This is an excellent article, and I'll definitely be referring back to it. I also print out my first drafts, because it makes editing so much easier for me. By the time I'm done, there are more pen marks than I could hope to count.

Erika Beebe said...

Thank you Jessica. Great article with lots of fantastic points I plan to use.

Nadine_Feldman said...

Wonderful post! I will let my NaNo draft cool for about three months...this book requires a lot of research, so I'll spend some of that time at the library. It's always hard to start looking at that draft, though! Once I pick it up and start working I get into "editor's mind" quickly, but I always have to circle and sniff for a while before I do it.

cleemckenzie said...

Lots of great questions to guide you through the process of editing that first draft! Thanks so much for giving it to us.

Hilary Melton-Butcher said...

Hi Susan - Jessica's post looks really useful to all authors - an excellent addition to 'the bible' of the book being edited. And it's good to stand back from your work to let it settle .. cheers to you both - Hilary

Peter Floyd said...

Fitzgerald was well equipped for crushing the enormity of Fitzgerald independent from anyone else.Mystery writer Buchanan

Anonymous said...

Great check-list that I will attempt to use, when I have let my current draft marinade - a draft that was a first draft, rewritten for NaNo with a new protagonist & POV, new setting, plus scenes... so Draft 1 Mark II. Usually, I leave a new manuscript for six months before re-working. But in the past that has proved too long, resulting in an abandoned novel. But this time...

Michelle Wallace said...

This is so informative. I'm going to print a copy and keep it handy.
Thank you, Jessica.

Robyn Campbell said...

Thank you, Jessica. What a well-thought out list. I am at the printer right this sec. I'm in revisions right now. And I've thrown out several chapters already. I thought: did I actually believe that junk was good? ;-) Much appreciated. Merry Christmas.

Unknown said...

That story bible tip really speaks to me. I'm always forgetting the names of lesser characters as I go on and have to refer to notes - or worse, I think I remember and end up writing the wrong name for the next half of the ms! lol

Sherry Ellis said...

This is a really in-depth guide for what to do when writing a second draft. Thanks for the tips!

Joylene Nowell Butler said...

Great set of tools for anyone working on their second draft. Thank you, Jessica. I'm on my 10 draft, but still, this list is full of excellent points I can use.