My Preferred Method
Everybody has a book inside them, so the saying goes, and
most of these books will be novels. This is because everybody has at least a
little imagination, and everybody has had experiences they can use in their story
and has met a variety of people they can base their fictitious characters on.
Of course, the older you are, the greater your material source will be.
So, how do you go about writing your novel? I shall describe
my referred method in this piece, and in several parts, so as to keep each part
easily digestible. It is, what I would call, a modified John Braine method.
John Braine was an English novelist who invariably employed a version of this
method to write his very successful novels. I have modified the method both to
suit myself and because nowadays many novels are published electronically via,
for example, Amazon’s Kindle.
The first thing you need to do is have some idea of what
type of novel you are going to write. You will probably base your book on the
sort of books you like to read, or on some experience you have had, or simply
on an idea that has suddenly come to you. Give it a little thought before
proceeding: you can make notes, as I have done in the past, or keep the ideas
in your head, as I do these days. Then try to think of a central character for
the story. Just conjure up a few details such as gender, age, how they look,
what they do for a living, where they live (if they have a home), and so forth.
Don’t worry too much about any of these details, since, as the story unfolds,
many of them will probably need to be changed as the character develops in your
head. Next, think of the storyline of your book. But don’t worry too much about
this either. This too, will need change and develop because it is the
characters that will drive the plot, and not the storyline that will control
the characters.
© Dick Morris 2014
(To be continued.)
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