One of my favorite pastimes is gardening. In the past, I most often approached planting as I do writing—as a pantser. Stick a plant here. Tuck another one there. No specific plan. That was until I decided to plant a shade garden from scratch. This required forethought—planning.
Yikes! I needed to make a garden plan?
Okay. I can do this.
Once I had my research assembled—garden books, magazines,
plant catalogues—out came the grid paper, sharp pencil, and circle template.
The completed design would be installed along the back fence
of my property. Each circle on the plan represented a specific plant identified
by a unique number. A list of the required plants and their bloom times was
presented below the garden drawing.
If I had felt especially creative, I could have used colored
pencils to represent plant colors and shaded the circles. I probably should
have, but as with writing, I’m always in a hurry to proceed.
What does this have to do with writing a novel? After
completing my first book without preplanning, then having to perform multiple
rewrites, I decided to do at least a minimum amount of planning with the second
book. I think it paid off. Sea Panther
was a 2013 Golden Heart® finalist.
As with the previous story, I started the process of writing
Sea Panther with research, but this
time, I assembled the miscellaneous bits and pieces in a three-ring binder.
Then I started writing to get a feel for the characters. After the first
several chapters were complete as a rough draft, I created an overall outline
for the story and a conflict chart for the main characters.
Circles—just like with the garden plan. I learned about the
conflict chart during a workshop presented by Laurie Sanders. It includes the
hero and heroine’s strengths and weaknesses, what attracts them, and what
causes conflict.
As with drawing the garden plan, I used a grid to create a
storyboard from the outline. Using a thick, 30 by 20 poster board divided into
twenty-four squares with each square representing a chapter, I recorded the premise
for each chapter on a yellow sticky and stuck them to the board. As the story
unfolded in my mind, stickies were added—a different color for each POV and/or
plot thread. With stickies, I could easily move scenes around on the board as
the story progressed. I also could locate when too much of one POV was used and
find plot holes.
This method worked for me. What works for you? Are you a
plotter or a pantser? What is your process?
Blurb for Dawn
Marie’s most recent book, Just Once in a
Verra Blue Moon:
What happens when a twenty-first century business executive
is expected to fulfill a prophecy given at the birth of a sixteenth-century
seer? Of course, he must raise his sword in her defense.
Believing women only want him for his wealth, Finn MacIntyre
doesn't trust any woman to love him. When, during Scottish Highland games,
faerie magic sends him back in time to avenge the brutal abduction of his
time-traveling cousin, he learns he's the subject of a fae prophecy.
Elspeth MacLachlan, the beloved clan seer, is betrothed to a
man she dislikes and dreams of the man prophesized at her birth, only to find
him in the most unexpected place—face down in the mud.
With the help of fae allies, they must overcome the treachery set to destroy them to claim a love that
transcends time.
About Dawn Marie:
Dawn Marie Hamilton dares you to dream. She is a 2013 RWA®
Golden Heart® Finalist who pens Scottish-inspired fantasy and paranormal
romance. Some of her tales are rife with mischief-making faeries, brownies, and
other fae creatures. More tormented souls—shape shifters, vampires, and maybe a
zombie or two—stalk across the pages of other stories. She is a member of The
Golden Network, Fantasy, Futuristic & Paranormal, Celtic Hearts, and From
the Heart chapters of RWA. When not writing, she’s cooking, gardening, or
paddling the local creeks of Southern Maryland with her husband.
You can find Dawn
Marie hanging out at…