Welcome back to the The Write Way
Café for another round of the My Writing Process Blog Tour. There is no “right” way to write. I’m always interested in learning what works
for other writers, and looking for ways to improve my own process. I'd like to thank my friend and blog partner, Lynn Crandall, for inviting me to participate.
What am I working on?
My current project is a
contemporary romance titled Fugitive Heart.
I started the story as a means to cope with frustrations generated by a
situation my family was unwittingly drawn into and had no control over. My characters, J.T. and Dana, took on a life
of their own and put my negative emotions to work in a much more positive
way. I’m also working on a story about a
woman who reconnects with her first love while in the midst of a midlife crisis. The idea for this story haunted my sleep for
a week before I accepted the challenge of telling the story.
How does my work differ from others of its genre?
I don’t know that my work is any
different than others in the genre, but I like throwing two people together who
have very different ideas about life, and showing how they overcome their
differences to make their relationship work.
Everybody has a right to be their own person, and I hope I am reflecting
that attitude in my characters.
Why do I write what I do?
I write contemporary romance because that’s what I enjoy
reading. My goal is to write books readers
can relate to and get lost in. I’ve
enjoyed so many adventures by living vicariously through characters in books,
and I hope to share some of my own adventures – real and imagined – with
others. I want to share and encourage a
love of reading.
How does your writing process work?
I never go anywhere without at
least a small notepad and pen, along with whatever book I’m currently
reading. Ideas are everywhere! They hit me when I least expect it, and often
they are quite persistent until I jot them down. That being said, I’m definitely a pantser. General ideas and notes work well for me,
while outlining drains my creativity. Usually
I start with a character and a situation.
Sometimes I have ideas about where the story should go and how it should
end, but other times, I figure it out as I write. I like turning my characters loose on the
page because they always surprise me.
My writing flows better when I
draft on paper, because my mind works faster than I can write. I’m always trying to catch up with the
thoughts in my head before I lose them.
But I put the draft on the computer early in the process. My thinking process is progressive, so I have
to write the story in order. I can’t
write a scene for the last third of the book, even if I have the idea detailed
in my notes, until I get there. It
messes me up. And I’m learning to let a
draft be a draft the first time through, instead of trying to revise and edit
it to the point that I can’t move on because that section isn’t done yet. My writing process is definitely a learning
process!
Thank you for checking out my
writing process. Next up on June 23, Nancy
Brandt and Meg Mims. I hope you will check
out their processes as well!
Nancy S. Brandt is
a stay-at-home mom, Army veteran, kidney transplant recipient and cancer
survivor who has been writing romantic fiction for over 20 years. She loves crafting worlds where magic,
dragons and intrigue keep her hero and heroine apart and only the power of true
love can overcome seemingly impossible obstacles. After all, when the real world is full of
parking tickets and tax returns, don't we all need some magic in our lives?
Author Meg Mims – also one-half
of the Eliza Doolittle & Henry Higgins mystery writing team for St.
Martin's Minotaur – lives in Michigan. She's won a Spur and a Laramie Award for
her popular western mystery series. http://megmims.com/my-writing-process-blog-tour/
7 comments:
Thanks for stopping by, Ramona. Appreciate it!
Enjoyed the interview...thanks for the post!
Great post! Love the website design, too.
Thanks, Meg. Looking forward to your post on Monday!
Very interesting post!
My website link is http://www.megmims.com/musings - the other link posted here will take you to an old post!
Thanks Lynn! Meg, I corrected your post on my post. :)
Post a Comment