I am delighted to join the Type M for Murder crew with my second post! I’m finding a wealth of insights into the fiction writing process and the writer’s life in other authors’ blog articles. I hope I can contribute new ideas based on my own journey.
This spring and summer, I have been exploring parallels
between my gardening efforts and my fiction writing. Writing and gardening
share phases of development. Each phase has a different kind of energy. You
don’t need to love each phase, but you do need to strive for competency in all
the phases if you hope for overall success.
Let’s dig in to the starting point. If you’ve never
gardened, this may surprise you.
Gardening doesn’t begin with plants, or even seeds. It
doesn’t even begin with the soil. A garden begins with a dream.
During the depths of winter, gardening catalogs begin to
arrive in the mailbox. From general commercial seed catalogs, to mom-and-pop
gardening supply businesses, to specialty heirloom tomato seed companies, they
all tempt with beautiful illustrations of possibilities. Experienced gardeners
also have a stash of seed packets or saved seeds from past seasons.
In writing, this is the idea phase. Another sort of
dreaming. An image pops into your imagination. A snippet of a scene. A
character. A setting. Snatches of dialogue. Most writers struggle with the
quantity of story ideas. Which ones will blossom into short stories or novels?
In the garden and in creative writing, you can’t do
everything. My garden space is limited. I want to grow ten different varieties
of pole beans, but I only have room for three or four. I’d like to grow
pumpkins, but they take an enormous amount of unfettered space.
I have ideas for three new series and a stand-alone novel. I
don’t have the energy or physical capacity to bring all of them to life. Not
all at once.
You begin with the dream of the garden, or the story. Seeing
what you want in your imagination. Lush. Potent. Compelling. The dream begins
to take form. Let this phase take you to impossible places.
The dreaming phase is a different kind of energy. Done right, it can lead to amazing results. Ignore the dream, and nothing will bear
fruit.
Next time, I’ll talk about phase two in gardening and
writing.
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