Adding Flesh to the Bones of Your Story Part One

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I’m not a painter, but I imagine that when an artist gets the glimmer of an idea, despite the medium, she does a sketch or an outline, and keeps it in a notebook. It’s a beginning that may become the focal point of the work. But what is later seen in the art studio or the museum months, years later, is far from that seed, that beginning. Writers also have to start somewhere.
BEGINNINGS
Maybe your initial start is the vision of a character, a voice in your head: someone’s pain or sorrowful experience, someone’s confession or the telling of a climactic achievement. Maybe the voice presents a goal that grows, speaks to you so often, you find yourself taking notes at odd hours of the day—and night. The seed could also be a fully-formed scene, so that when you sit down to write, it comes onto the page with clear dialogue, growing as you write, the characters conforming to how you imagined them. Because this is yours; this is the story you want to write. It’s coming together. Your book, article, poem is alive, but needs so much more; like a lump of clay or a sketch on paper, your story is taking shape, so that you feel excitement when you sit down to work ..all part of the process. You are a writer. (or maybe an artist etc)
DEFINITIONS FOR WRITERS
Whether a Pantser or Plotter, writers start by making decisions about the basic story–and we then become eager to forge ahead, can’t wait to get back to the keyboard. There are character traits to flesh out, worlds to create, the power of the keyboard becoming heady: where will our characters live, travel? Who will they love or hate? Will they have an unusual occupation, be homeless, physically or mentally challenged? How will the pages we write affect our readers’ emotions? Can you make them laugh, cry, cringe–maybe even dream they are living the lives you are creating?
HOW AND WHY WE DO THIS
Novels build around a basic plot that’s going to tell an amazing story. But as it goes to the page, you find yourself adding more. It grows, sometimes it even becomes unruly. You have to go back, you have to cut. You are giving the work shape, because you have another important goal: to dig down, give your story the depth that Readers desire.
STEPS TO TAKE…
There’s no time-line to this process. Each of us works in our own way. Maybe you write the basic story from page one to the end to see how the plot works out. Maybe you aren’t even sure of your ending, but then an idea hits. Maybe you add it in right away, or you make a file to peruse later, see how this new idea can be incorporated. The process is yours. Stick with it, though I am only highlighting some methods that will help you mine ideas, deepen your story.
SCENE BUILDING can deepen your story. During a workshop, I discovered I wasn’t using that concept to my advantage. My novel needed that device to bring the reader into the story. And because my story contained a drawing created by the child who goes missing, why not have the parents frame the drawing, then argue about whether to keep it in the kitchen or store it somewhere. The drawing becomes a symbol of how the mother and father are dealing with this crisis. The mother takes the drawing done; the father gets angry and hangs it back up, encouraging her to believe that their child will be found.
PLACE IS ALSO WORLD BUILDING. Setting your character in a place where she can hear the ocean or the traffic on Michigan Avenue, smell pizza from the restaurant across the street or hear a basketball bouncing on the floor of the apartment above—will pull your reader in.
Place is where a character lives, why she stays or leaves. Place defines aspects of personality, and can produce incredible tension.
My WIP (work in progress) takes place in the North Side Chicago neighborhood where I lived for four years. First-hand experience helps, but is not necessary. Your writing can thrive using any place in the world—with research—your keyboard being your plane, bus, ship. Your character’s attachment, his or her’s fear, anxiety or excitement about the place that you create does not need real geography. It only needs your creative imagination. Because the emotions we experience in life could occur anywhere…so though my background is Chicago, Des Moines, Iowa, and Westlake Village, California, the basic emotions that my characters must deal with could apply to people living in London, Paris, wherever. Bottom line: deepen your writing on the page; create your character’s emotional connection to place. Thanks for reading, and if you are currently writing a novel, short story, or your life story, I hope some of the above will help.
Part Two next week










