Help-My Middle is Sagging!
Not my belly, thank goodness, but the middle of my WIP. Yep. I've reached one hundred pages and am bored.
Sometimes our manuscripts get a little flabby if we don't pay attention to conflict. Yuck, but true.
Since I'm not an expert (obviously, since I've encountered this problem on my THIRD manuscript) I'm going to point you elsewhere for wisdom.
The one on Fiction Factor is awesome and very detailed on how to possibly fix the problem. My lovely friend Anita generously shared her link to it with me. By the way, if you check out her blog she has a whole bunch of great links posted.
So, has this happened to you? Your story is out of juice and you're only half done? What do you do to jumpstart it? Or have you had to go back and completely revise?
Sometimes our manuscripts get a little flabby if we don't pay attention to conflict. Yuck, but true.
Since I'm not an expert (obviously, since I've encountered this problem on my THIRD manuscript) I'm going to point you elsewhere for wisdom.
The one on Fiction Factor is awesome and very detailed on how to possibly fix the problem. My lovely friend Anita generously shared her link to it with me. By the way, if you check out her blog she has a whole bunch of great links posted.
So, has this happened to you? Your story is out of juice and you're only half done? What do you do to jumpstart it? Or have you had to go back and completely revise?
Comments
I like this post. I'm going to have to check out that huge archive of writing articles and see if they have anything about sagging midsections (BTW, your joke was cute!). I'm all curious now...
As for me, in the past I seemed to always have more trouble with getting the book started. Is there such a thing as a sagging beginning? Once I got the story started, it seemed to do fine from there. I think I'm getting better at beginnings now, but I have to always make a conscious effort.
I guess we each have our own weaknesses, don't we?
I haven't changed the word count in a while. I still think you're beating me.
And trust me, I thought many times of sending you an e-mail, but couldn't think of what I should say.
Looking forward to yours!!
I've heard that many times editors feel like an author's 3rd manuscript is when they really seem to get it. Good luck with yours!
How's the thousand words a day?
Remember my running? It's been weeks. I feel like this is true confession time. I also haven't woken up (willingly) before seven in ages.
The things we want to do...
So, what genre are you writing?
I enjoyed the article - very informative. I thought my first book was finished when I hit 55,000words. Several people at a conference burst my bubble with the news it had to be 80-100,000 words.
Back to the drawing board. New conflicts, beefed up characters, and lots of action brought the word count up to 96,000. I'm hoping I can hang onto 80,000 by the time it goes through the slash and burn of editing.
Blessings,
Susan :)
Do I sound like a downer or what? On a lighter note, I'm almost caught up on my reading and enjoying the beef jerky I won!
Sarah, I don't know you, but I think you sound amazingly grounded and chipper for someone who's going through such a rough time. God bless you and your hubbie.
Keep up the writing!
Me, I have to ask myself this all the way through. I sag everywhere, it would seem. LOL
That's a great way to up the conflict and hook the reader!
Hehehe, sag everywhere? That's funny :-)
Anita is very kind :-) Her blog is on my sidebar-A Still and Quiet Madness.
I hope he feels better too, or that an organ becomes availables soon.
Susan - don't panic yet! 55,000 words is the perfect length for Harlequin/Silhouette and the Steeple Hill Love Inspired category lines (http://www.eharlequin.com/articlepage.html?articleId=538&chapter=0)