Author Journal 9th – 15th June 2022

Hiya ?

Last week I shared that I set up a timetable to help me focus on my edits. I also mentioned that Iā€™d probably not stick to it. My prediction was correct, but not to the extent Iā€™d internally feared. Yay!

The timetable I set up is a fantasy. The fact I actually stuck to it 70-ish% of the time is shocking to me. The times I did stick to it, I saw a considerable increase in my focus on the job–and a boost in my overall productivity. ?

Review 2nd ā€“ 8th June 2022

Hereā€™s what last weekā€™s goal looked like:

Hereā€™s How It Went

Act IIB consists of eighteen scenes (one is actually a lengthy sequence), which is pretty intimidating when itā€™s staring you in the face. So, I broke the task down to evenly distribute the scenes (by word count, not scene count) over the five-day workweek. [Fellow planner geeks, youā€™ll know this is ā€œchunkingā€.]

Thursday was scenes (sc) 1 – 4, and on Friday, scenes 5 – 8. No problem. Saturday, it was scenes 9 and 10. Sounds like a nice light word day… except it wasnā€™t. Scene 10 is actually a lengthy genre-fulfilling sequence (seq). A monster scene, if you will.

I started in on sc 9, but 800 words in, I hit a block. Thereā€™s a revelation in the scene, one that must come out in Act IIA/B at some point. I played around with this key detail for a whole section of my schedule. I was running out of time, and I still hadnā€™t touched the monster seq.

Putting the revelation on the backburner, I ploughed ahead with tackling the monster, promising that Iā€™d hit it first thing on Sunday morning. That monster seq. turned out to be a playful Rottweiler? .

My biggest work day, Sunday, had a heavier load–sc 9 & 11 – 16. The moment I sat down to deal with the incomplete sc 9, I realised I still had no idea what to do about the revelation. I decided to ignore it for a bit and get on with the next batch of scenes.

And then, because I actually stuck to 90% of the schedule, I blasted the last two scenes. The ones planned for Monday. But, eventually, those were done, too. Now, nothing was preventing me from dealing with scene 9.

As I sat there contemplating deleting the whole need for the revelation, the one with the stakes attached to it, I realised Iā€™d fucked up. Iā€™d mistaken the revelation as a structural issue when itā€™s an emotional one (Elleā€™s relationship arc with her sister, Dani), which Iā€™ll deal with in a later pass.

With that all dealt with, I finished the scene and then had a good look at the other sub-goal. Cut 10-15K words from Act IIB. To be honest, until this morning, I thought Iā€™d only managed to cut 5K. But then I realised that the first three scenes in Act IIB actually belong to Act IIA. Bang! Another 6K gone ?

A side bonus to moving the scenes is that my story is perfectly balanced! Act I: 15 sc; Act IIA: 16 sc; Act IIB: 16 sc; and Act III: 15 sc ?

This Weekā€™s Goal

  • SWYM edit (structure) First half of Act IIA (scenes 1 – 8)

At the start of the year, I overhauled the entire outline for Running the Asset. As Iā€™d written the first half of the manuscript beforehand, Iā€™ll need longer to deal with all the changes, deletions, and additions. Fingers crossed that an extra week is more than enough to get the job done.

Thatā€™s it for today. Thanks for stopping by, and take care.

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About Me

Hi! I’m Scottish author Susan Tippett Braithwaite. I craft romantic suspense stories featuring Sex, Lies, Scots & Spies where danger and desire meet with explosive results.

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7 responses to “Author Journal 9th – 15th June 2022

  1. bushboy Avatar

    Don’t let emotions get in the way of revelation structural issues…..or whatever. You know I have no idea what I am talking about just being supportive šŸ™‚

    1. Susan T. Braithwaite Avatar

      Thanks for the support!
      My methods are confusing if you don’t live in my head ?

      1. bushboy Avatar

        ?

  2. Chris Hall Avatar

    The theory’s baffling me a bit too, but whatever works – and we know nothing ever totally goes to plan!
    Hang in there, Susan… it’s coming along šŸ™‚

    1. Susan T. Braithwaite Avatar

      Thanks, Chris!
      I like to keep the plot framework separate from the emotional and relationship arcs. It makes editing so much faster, for me–when I remember to focus on one pass at a time.

  3. Aletta - nowathome Avatar

    I am sure you will know whats best for your story, Susan! I can do it ! šŸ˜€ šŸ˜€

    1. Susan T. Braithwaite Avatar

      Thank you, Aletta! ?

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