I started writing a new book today. Now if you know my
writing you know that's not a particularly unusual or special event. But
it always seems special to me.
No matter how many times I’ve
done it, it’s a daunting task beginning a novel. I have to turn one blank page into some 300
pages full of a different assortment of letters.
I recently came across this old post from way back in 2009 that
works as well as advise for getting started as for finding your way though.
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If there is one thing successful fiction authors have to
have it’s a belief in themselves. They have to believe absolutely that they
have the ability to create a good story.
Plenty of people, probably numbering in the millions, have
an idea for a book or have begun to write one. More often than not, nothing comes
of it, and the work is never finished. In many cases they hit the ‘soggy
middle’ or can’t find their way through a tricky plot point, and give up.
Once you have a book or two under your belt, there comes a
time in which you believe in yourself, or in your characters, and that
knowledge will carry you through.
Case in point – I am a rough outliner, meaning that I have an
idea of how I want my story to progress, and what obstacles are going to impede
the characters. But the outline is drawn in broad strokes only and all the
details have to be filled in as I go.

I didn’t spend much time thinking about it. I trusted myself
to come up with an idea, but I will confess I was getting a bit nervous. And
then it happened - I was taking a walk, thought of something I’d seen, and –
presto - I knew the answer. So perfect it even fit into another plot point
without jiggling.
The moral of the story is to trust yourself. Or trust your
characters. I’m sure John Winters would have thought of it eventually.