Tuesday, May 8, 2012

don't be a hoarder!

Let me start by saying a huge thank you to the lovely authors who make up the amazing team here at ADR3NALIN3 for inviting me to become a part of their family. I'm very happy to be here, and cannot wait to learn all I can from their genius!

For my very first ADR3NALIN3 post, I thought I would share with you all one of my most popular blog posts from my own blog, writers write, right?. It's also a post that I tend to revert back to when writing (and one I wish I had written before my first book was released, because I needed it!), and one I hope you may all find useful. So without further ado, I give you...

Don't be a Hoarder!



We hear it all the time: Streamline your writing. Take out all the "unnecessary" words, phrases, dialogue, characters...make your writing tight and beautiful and perfect. Yeah. If it were as easy to do as it is to say, we'd all have books on the shelves, right? But there is a way, I believe, to achieve the goal of tight, beautiful prose. And I think the A&E show Hoarders gives us a prime example how. Just bare with me, I'm not as crazy as I seem.


In some way or another, writing is like this show. The people showcased here collect as much stuff as they can and keep it. Forever. We as writers tend to do that, don't you think? When we start a first draft of "The Next Great American Novel", we are deeply in love with our words. All 150,000 of them. We don't want to lose a single one. We argue with ourselves, our crit partners, our beta readers, our editors, that each word means something to the overall story.

It won't make sense without that adjective!
But I need that "that" in there!
I know I used "just" 1,284 times...I meant to!


Sound familiar? Yeah, I do it too. But we can't, people. We just can't. If we do, our WIPs are gonna look like this:


Yeah. Imagine all that stuff is really words, piled from the top of the page to the bottom. Ugly, huh? None of us really want that, no matter how much we say we do. So let's try to not be hoarders, and clean it up.

Like the experts tell the guests on the show, you have to dig deep to find out what the real root of the problem is, and begin there. Otherwise, you'll end up right back where you started. In our writing, we, too, need to dig deep. We need to dig deep into the back story of our characters to find what really makes them tick. We need to dig deep through our creative minds to find the words we really want to use instead of those plain, boring, unnecessary ones. We need to dig deep to discover that less really is more. Piece of cake. Done.

If only.

To me, the task of cleaning up my completed first draft was overwhelming when I first stepped into the world of "wanting to be a writer". So overwhelming, in fact, that I completely scrapped my first completed work just so I wouldn't have to edit it. Crazy, I know. But at the time, I just couldn't handle the stress of revision. (See how I like the word 'just'?)

Fast-forward to one published book under my belt, and I'm exactly the same! After "digging deep" into the world of author blogs and agent websites and "How To Write A Book Without Really Writing It" books, I fully understand the all-encompassing need to revise, revise, revise.

That doesn't mean I want to, though.

I know that there are some writers out there who absolutely love revising their work. They speed through the first draft like a meth addict rifling through a stranger's belongings, just so they can get to the editing. I envy those people, I really do. I wish I could have the Gung-ho attitude they possess. But alas, I do not. I have to rely on my own lacking will power to get my butt in the chair and revise. But I have learned something that helps. And I learned it from Hoarders.

All you have to do is break it down room by room. On the show, the expert organizers and therapists that are brought in to help the hoarders usually tackle one room at a time so as not to overwhelm the homeowners. They would take the kitchen you saw earlier in this post and completely empty it, throwing out all the unnecessary junk and trash, putting back only what is necessary for survival. Boy that sounds good, huh? Don't you wanna get rid of the junk and trash in your WIP and leave only what's necessary for it to survive? I know I sure do.

For my current ms (book 2 in my first trilogy), I am in the process of revising. And I've decided to break it down "room by room" - starting with the dreaded adjectives. We all use them, we all love them. And I'm sure we all abuse the heck out of them, too! Overuse, misuse, whatever you wanna label it, we all do it. I'm going through the entire ms, only paying attention to my use of adjectives, nothing else. Once I'm done with that, I'll go back to the beginning and work on something else (word repetition, probably). Then when I'm done with that pass, I'll go back to the beginning and pick another faux pas. And so on and so on and so on...you get the idea.

I'm hoping that revising this way will be much less stressful in my mind, and that I'll actually enjoy it. Who knows? Maybe once I'm done, my ms will look more like this:

So what about all of you? How do you revise? Do you see any of your writing in this kitchen--either before or after?

6 comments:

Jordan Dane said...

WELCOME to ADR3, Jamie! So glad you're here. Nice post.

I revise as I go. I make my daily writing goal & do a rolling edit (over the new material & older) countless times while making progress forward. When I make fewer revisions I move on & quit looking back. My first pass is always to delete & tighten. I look for redundant words & over-writing. It helps with cadence if I read it aloud.

My next pass is to layer in emotion & character motivation. Whatever my intention for a scene, I magnify it. Sometimes as I learn more about the character or want to add a cool plot twist, I weave threads of this into earlier passages so the reader feels the idea is firmly grounded into the book.

I like the word "just" too. I try to not use it, but it comes naturally in how I speak, so I leave it in sometimes, not just in dialogue.

Welcome, Jamie. Best wishes on your debut series.

Anita Grace Howard said...

Haha! What a great comparison, Jamie! Love this post. And yeah, I learned a LONG time ago to have a "cut excerpt" file for each of my books. That way, it gives me the freedom to be liberal w/my cutting, because I know I can always go back into that file and find something if I decide I REALLY have to have it. Welcome to ADR3! Awesome first post. :)

Mandie Baxter said...

All 150,000 of them. Bahaha. If ONLY I had that many! ;0) This is a great post (though that show terrifies me to no end).

Amanda Stevens said...

I'm a voracious hoarder at the start of my books, but once I can see that the end is near, I'll go back and slice and dice at will. But I can't do it at first. It takes too many words to get to the end.

Dan Haring said...

Great post Jamie and welcome to ADR3! I rarely go back and edit as I'm writing. Just getting the first draft done is hard enough. I need all those words! But then once it's done I can go back and edit, and I actually enjoy that part.

Leeanna said...

Watching Hoarders always makes me want to clean my room, which is one of my least favorite things to do. So is revision. The comparison you've made here is a good one, and with some good advice on how to tackle revising.

I know revising is something I need to do. I just ... don't do it. Hah. I know how much better it will make my writing, but with the sort of thing I'm doing right now, I often don't have time.

But now that I'm starting to take the plunge to original, I know revising is going to be *necessary.* So thanks for the tips on how to make it not so overwhelming. Going "room by room" is a good suggestion.

One thing I do now is keep all my old versions. It's neat to look back and see what I've cut and changed.