by Catherine Dilts
Gardening and fiction writing both begin with a dream. In writing, it’s the spark of a story idea. In gardening, the dream is often born in the depths of winter, with a yearning for warm days and neat rows of green things. For either of these dreams to come true, you have to prepare.
What might sound surprising is that the preparation phase in gardening is not about seeds and plants. Not quite yet. Before ever putting a shovel in the ground, you plot out a garden. Measure your gardening space. How much room do you have? How many plants can you grow in that space? What variety will produce the number of tomatoes you hope to harvest? Will you really pick and use cilantro or dill? A certain amount of planning is prudent.
Fiction writing requires preparation, too. Writers have
likely heard of the Panster versus Plotter techniques. Pantsers start on page
one and just write, letting the story flow under its own steam. Plotters
outline their story, like a driver marking their route to a destination on a
map.
I have learned through trial and error that I need to
outline heavily. Otherwise, I write myself into a corner. I spend hours
returning to the beginning of the story to install the clues and red herrings
needed in a good mystery. Outlining helps me avoid that.
Most writers aren’t 100% a Pantser or Plotter. Every Pantser
I’ve talked to does have, at bare minimum, an idea of where the story is going.
And although I tediously outline my stories from beginning to end, they frequently diverge from that carefully crafted path, taking a surprising and
unplanned route.
Preparation to plant a garden or write a story can be
agonizing for me. But tossing a handful of random seeds onto the ground will be
unlikely to produce the vegetables I want. Likewise, throwing words onto my
computer in any kind of order usually results in an unreadable mess.
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