Wednesday, November 9, 2011

There Is No One Right Way

I think it is time for a "reminder blog" today. I know this is something we hear time and time again from agents and editors, but authors often forget it. Much of this stems from (I believe) the way we write things here on the blogs. Regardless of the reason, we need to remember that, in the end, there is no one right way of telling our stories, writing submission letters, or even writing a synopsis.

When it comes down to it, every situation and every writer is different. This means that you have to examine your writing project and determine the needs it is dictating. The factors that control what and how you write will be determined by the genre you are writing, the publisher you are targeting, or even the agent that you are sending it to. Outside of that, it is entirely up to you as to what you want to do.

Please understand that I am not taking a relativistic approach to this and anything goes. You still need to know your audience and the piece you are writing. There are those parameters you have to work with so deal with it. But, again remember that within those parameters you can pretty much do anything.

So what does this deal with?
  • Do I have to write in 1st or 3rd person?
  • Do the characters have to meet in the first chapter?
  • Can I start with the hero and not the heroine?
  • How many pages are in a chapter?
  • Does my synopsis have to be a certain page count?
  • Can I do a synopsis in a chapter by chapter format?
  • Etc.
Before you go and freak yourself out, consider your situation. Relax and think.

Scott

2 comments:

  1. This is good advice, Scott.

    A lot of times people will get "rules" into their minds, such as the hero and heroine have to meet on the first page, and then regurgitate these rules to others. They might be trying to be helpful but savvy writers will ultimately go and do the research themselves.

    Trust but verify, lol

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  2. Thanks Scott. I hope someday my creativity will find a way into a library or two. If not, well that's okay too. I lived, I wrote and most of all I tried my best.

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